What would it mean to say that aspects of experience are illusory? Just that they are not what we think they are, no? Are we liable to think of them as substantive? — Janus
When someone refuses to agree that all conscious experience of seeing red cups includes red cups, there's not much more that can be said is there? — creativesoul
it's the proponents of "qualia" who set it, t
— creativesoul
Dennett set up this strawman all by himself. You are not paying attention.
Personally I would rather obliterate any and all philosophical notions that lead to widespread confusion and false belief given the sheer power that belief wields in this shared world of ours.
— creativesoul
You are welcome to obliterate your own concepts, and not use certain words.
Personally, I treat words as tools. I need tools to do stuff, and I am not going to jettison a concept without a good replacement. So what other concept do you propose, to replace qualia? — Olivier5
The term qualia seems to be useful in philosophy of mind discussions to pick out or emphasise the subjective, phenomenal aspects of experience. — Luke
We all know what red cups look like. We know that each and every experience of seeing a red cup always involves seeing red cups. It only follows that we do sometimes know what others are experiencing when seeing a red cup for we know that the experience - most definitely - includes red cups. — creativesoul
You might know how red objects appear to you (or what red objects “look like” to you), but how do you know how red objects appear to other people? — Luke
How can you know that red objects appear the same (colour) to everyone?
Red, I would think. — creativesoul
Has something to do with the visible light spectrum that they're picking out. — creativesoul
Does that appear red to you?
Yep.
Cool. — creativesoul
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup? — Luke
How can you know that red objects appear the same (colour) to everyone?
Has something to do with certain frequencies of visible light spectrum being picking out. — creativesoul
“Since we both learned color words by being shown public colored objects, our verbal behavior will match even if we experience entirely different subjective colors.” — Luke
Yeah, its weird how everyone always picks out the red ones. I'm fairly certain that that's because those frequencies appear exactly like those frequencies each and every time someone is picking out red cups... — creativesoul
Since we both learned color words by being shown public colored objects, our verbal behavior will match even if we experience entirely different subjective colors.” — Luke
What do you think about the three kinds of conscious experience I set out recently? — creativesoul
Gotta love it when folk ask someone to compare something that is nowhere to be seen to a color chart. — creativesoul
The term qualia seems to be useful in philosophy of mind discussions to pick out or emphasise the subjective, phenomenal aspects of experience.
But thing is that we don't always see the same colors. — Marchesk
There are variations in our biological machinery. — creativesoul
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