let’s say we never evolved eyes. — Marchesk
this was meant to cover cases where people do not have the exact same experience, but they can still communicate about the same object. — Marchesk
We'll never make it to a thousand pages with that attitude. — frank
Both a robot and a human can detect red light.
A human has an accompanying experience. The robot doesn't.
Right? — frank
but now you say we should use 'isomorphic'. — Banno
It would be a great help if you articulated your argument. — Banno
It doesn’t matter what I am referring to when I say red and when you say red as long as the relationship is the same. I’ll call my experience that red refers to X and I’ll call yours Y. As I was saying, X could equal Y. But even if they’re not, we will have no issues of communication if:
Everything that produces X for me produces Y for you. That’s roughly what an isomorphism is. That’s what I mean by “the relationship is the same”
If that is the case and I see blood for example, that would produce the experience X, and I would promptly call it “red”. If when you see blood you get the experience Y you will ALSO promptly call it “red”. Therefore there is no issue of communication see? — khaled
So I'm understanding that qualia are somehow important to your political philosophy - which seems not to be too far form my own leftist leanings - and so you want to defend it — Banno
I was thinking of adding an exegesis on the SEP qualia article, which is pretty good, and tending more to your views, I suspect — Banno
We have the age old Mary’s room thought experiment which is no longer really a thought experiment. We can “cure” some forms of color blindness or deafness and you always see the participant being shocked at the experience. I’m pretty sure you’d still get the same reaction even if the participant had a PhD in neurology. Point is that there is some information that is present in the experience itself that is not present in a neurological description of the brain as it is occurring. Which is also to imply that they’re not the same thing (as clearly there is some information present in one not present in the other). Otherwise why are people surprised when the see color for the first time? — khaled
and pointed out that there is no way we could know that this is true, given that our experiences are set out as private, unsharable.Everything that produces X for me produces Y for you. — khaled
I thought that touching on that might help. — frank
We don't need to posit a shared experiences, or even hypothesis shared experiences, if instead we look at what we are doing with the words - the role they play in our language games. — Banno
The solution I see, outlined above, is to treat physical explanations and intentional discussions as distinct language games, neither reducible to the other, but neither implying any ontological concerns for the other. — Banno
As long as red apples produce X for me and Y for you and we both respectively call the experience we’re having “red” there are no issues. — khaled
It doesn't matter if you have the same experiences as I, or if they are isomorphic, or anything at all about them, provided that you pass me the red apple. — Banno
It doesn't matter if you have the same experiences as I, or if they are isomorphic, or anything at all about them, provided that you pass me the red apple — Banno
I can't directly show you my perceptions or sensations, and neither can anyone else.
— Luke
That's a Cartesian view of perception and experience.
— Andrew M
Why must it be? — Luke
I don't disagree, but that's not showing me your perceptions or sensations. Maybe you're colour-blind and you perceive it differently to me. You can show me the object you are looking at, but that's not showing me how it looks to you. — Luke
I agree, it is potentially discoverable and comparable - I'm not trying to argue for anything supernatural. However, it remains private until then. Anyway, it's not really the privacy that's at issue here, but whether there is, in fact, some way that things seem to a person, i.e. some "inner" phenomenal experience. That's the definition of qualia given by Dennett, and what I understand eliminative materialists consider as somehow unreal. — Luke
I have long considerd the hard problem to be a question of why, rather than how. Namely: why do we have phenomenal experiences at all? That question would not seem to be answered by a complete "map" of how all phenomenal experience corresponds to the body/brain. — Luke
A problem with this might be that a perceptual difference needs to be noticeable in order to...get noticed, and therefore some perceptual differences could remain undiscovered and private. — Luke
Or, more precisely, on an ordinary perceptual model there is no implication of an "inner" egg to begin with. — Andrew M
In giving up the dualism of scheme and world, we do not give up the world, but reestablish unmediated touch with the familiar objects whose antics make our sentences and opinions true or false.
The solution I see, outlined above, is to treat physical explanations and intentional discussions as distinct language games, neither reducible to the other, but neither implying any ontological concerns for the other. — Banno
Without Qualia there would be no way to distinguish from someone who stubbornly refuses to use the right words for the right colors and someone who is actually colorblind. — khaled
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.