hypericin
One of the gists is that the emergence of organic life is also the emergence of intentional consciousness, even at very rudimentary levels of development. Like, nothing matters to a crystal or a rock formation, but things definitely matter to a bacterium, because it has skin (or a membrane) in the game, so to speak. — Wayfarer
I would like to think that the sentience of beings other than human is not something for us to decide. Whether viruses or archai or plants are sentient may forever remain moot, but that anything we designate with term 'being' is sentient as part of the definition (hence the frequent Buddhist reference to 'all sentient beings'.) — Wayfarer
Banno
The claim is that in order for you to be conscious of anything at all, that consciousness must have a felt quality. — hypericin
Here's the same thing again; to be sentient is to perceive or feel; and saying "qualia is the bedrock of sentience" sounds cool, as if "Ah! Now we know! it's qualia that explain consciousness!"I would argue that qualia is the bedrock of sentience. — hypericin
Wayfarer
Roombas have "drives", to clean. — hypericin
Patterner
Also the emergence of information processing.One of the gists is that the emergence of organic life is also the emergence of intentional consciousness, even at very rudimentary levels of development. — Wayfarer
Can you give me an example of an insentient being?I thought that 'all sentient beings' was making a distinction between these and insentient beings? — hypericin
boundless
The second two examples use "aware" in its other sense, which is simply to know a certain fact.
To be aware of a mosquito bite, aware of a sunset, aware of a feeling of jealousy, are all qualitative states. There is something it is like to experience each of these. What each is like is quite different. What unifies them is that they are all varieties of qualitative conscious states, they each have a felt quality. "Qualia" bundles this property of having a felt quality into a conceptual bucket. — hypericin
hypericin
Somewere I once read the aphorism that 'a soul is any being capable of saying "I am"' — Wayfarer
hypericin
Agree that it's very hard to determine what is or isn't sentient at borderline cases such as viruses (presumably not) or jellyfish and so on. — Wayfarer
Banno
hypericin
Should we shoehorn consciousness into a definition, or learn to work with a level of ambiguity? — Banno
Wayfarer
Is it that we have not yet found a clean and clear definition of consciousness, or is it that consciousness is not one thing, with a clean and clear definition? — Banno
"I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description ('hard-core pornography'); and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligently doing so. But I know it when I see it, and the motion picture involved in this case is not that." — Justice Potter Stewart
Banno
I don't think so. Rather what you see as epistemic - an inability to know if someone is conscious - is the result of thinking about a family of related notions as if they were a single notion.What you are describing is not conceptual ambiguity, but rather epistemic ambiguity. — hypericin
Wayfarer
Banno
Analytic philosophy is a broad church.I've always seen it as a way of re-framing the debate in analytical terms — Wayfarer
hypericin
You do realise, though, that the use of this term 'quale' or 'qualia' is almost entirely unique to a very narrow band of discourse, — Wayfarer
allow for the designation of the qualities of conscious experience as a spurious object — Wayfarer
Wayfarer
Only if modern analytic discourse on consciousness is a narrow band in its entirety. — hypericin
The really hard problem of consciousness is the problem of experience. When we think and perceive, there is a whir of information-processing, but there is also a subjective aspect. As Nagel (1974) has put it, there is something it is like to be a conscious organism. This subjective aspect is experience. When we see, for example, we experience visual sensations: the felt quality of redness, the experience of dark and light, the quality of depth in a visual field. Other experiences go along with perception in different modalities: the sound of a clarinet, the smell of mothballs. Then there are bodily sensations, from pains to orgasms; mental images that are conjured up internally; the felt quality of emotion, and the experience of a stream of conscious thought. What unites all of these states is that there is something it is like to be in them. All of them are states of experience.
It is undeniable that some organisms are subjects of experience. But the question of how it is that these systems are subjects of experience is perplexing. Why is it that when our cognitive systems engage in visual and auditory information-processing, we have visual or auditory experience: the quality of deep blue, the sensation of middle C? How can we explain why there is something it is like to entertain a mental image, or to experience an emotion? It is widely agreed that experience arises from a physical basis, but we have no good explanation of why and how it so arises. Why should physical processing give rise to a rich inner life at all? It seems objectively unreasonable that it should, and yet it does.
If any problem qualifies as the problem of consciousness, it is this one. In this central sense of "consciousness", an organism is conscious if there is something it is like to be that organism, and a mental state is conscious if there is something it is like to be in that state. Sometimes terms such as "phenomenal consciousness" and "qualia" are also used here, but I find it more natural to speak of "conscious experience" or simply "experience".
noAxioms
You do think so."The universe is not composed of true statements" is also an indexical — noAxioms
I don't think so. — Banno
By this very idealistic definition, this particular universe is the actual one due to your presence in it, and possibly due to your perception of it. It depending on the context of your perceptions, this universe's actuality is an indexical.By definition, the actual world is the one we are in. — Banno
It works in that the referent (especially with the coffee, not so much the paint) is the private sensation that evokes the public concept of coffee. It is not a referent to coffee. It being a reference to a private thing, it bears no implication that your personal experience of the scent is similar, but it can still be a reference to the personal experience of another.Notice that we manage to name the smell of coffee and the shade of red in the paint shop, despite supposedly not being confident that your smell of coffee and your sensation of red has anything in common with mine?
How's that work, then. — Banno
That usage has both of us detecting the same public actual coffee. That usage is not a reference to the experience of the scent, only to the action of detection of the public substance.If you and I both smell coffee, it cannot be a reference to an indexical private thing, since we both smell it. — Banno
I said as much in the OP. It's why we cannot know what it's like to be a bat, but given that, we also cannot go around asserting that there is or is not something it is like to be X. If you're not X, then this cannot be known.We can give someone who can see all colors but red all the information that can ever be given, and they will not know what red looks like. No description or data will help. — Patterner
Hence 1) my falsification test mentioned in the OP, 2) the inconceivability of a p-zombie acting undetectably the same, and 3) I suspect that the ability to object at all would be stripped away with the qualia gone. Such actions rely on continuous feedback, feedback which is now gone.I think if someone was going to strip away your qualia, you would object. Probably strenuously. — Patterner
Definitions don't tell you how things work. They're not metaphysics at all. They just indicate how language is to be used. I can't prove my solipsism by defining existence to be confined only to that which I directly perceive.But are qualia real without consciousness? Qualia are first person as a matter of definition. — Wayfarer
Great, so since the roomba knows where it has been and where it still needs to go (knowledge of a fact), then it is only via its consciousness that it can come by this knowledge.It's also not a 'brute fact' - being consciously aware is prior to the knowledge of any facts. — Wayfarer
Nobody claimed they were life forms. But I know. You're leaning on your proof-by-definition again, which as I just said above, just shows how language is typically used, and doesn't prove anything about the roomba not doing as much and more than many 'sentient' life forms.But [roombas] don't heal, grow, reproduce, or mutate. — Wayfarer
Well, 'qualitative' apparently is a word reserved for life forms, and since non-living things can know stuff (see roomba example just above), I must either disagree with the statement or disagree with all the definitions that are confined to life forms.IMO I don't even think that we can say that one can 'know' something without a qualitative experience. — boundless
It's actually a matter of coordinate system choice, and not on who says it. Any person can choose whatever coordinates he likes. For a given person, the coordinate system would be loosely suggested more by which way he faces than who he's with."The cold mountain is to the left" you labeled an indexical despite it not being dependent on who says it. — noAxioms
Well, yes it is. If we face each other, then if it is to my left, it is not to your left. It matter who says it. That's why it is called indexical. — Banno
Again, the experience of both interpretations is identical, so if it isn't compatible with eternalism, then it isn't compatible with presentism either. Both have you experiencing flow of time. I have a hard time with free will since there's no way to detect it one way or another. It also seems to make no predictions.The problem with eternalism is: are those experiences (i.e. that 'time flows', the appearance of 'free will' etc) compatible with eternalism? — boundless
Since the two interpretations are empirically identical, you cannot have knowledge of which is correct. So there's no empirical knowledge to trust when it comes to anything interpretational.In fact, as I said before, if we deny those 'raw' experiences, can we trust empirical knowledge?
Yes. It's really easy to show this. But our universe isn't composed of statements or determinations of halting or whatnot. It's simply run by rules, none of which seem to contradict its operation. A counterexample would help a lot.IIRC, Goedel's theorems showed that even in relatively simple mathematical structures you get true yet unprovable (within the structure) propositions.
Agree. How is this relevant since I'm not suggesting that all truths must be derived?So, you can't derive all mathematical truths by a set of arbitrary axioms.
If it was invented, it wouldn't be fundamental, but rather supervening on this inventor. So no argument here either.This clearly suggests that mathematics isn't 'invented' IMO
2+3 sums up to 5. That works whether those values are real or not. Some disagree.MUH can also be a non-realist view. — noAxioms
Interesting, however I'm not sure how to conceive it. — boundless
You mean you think those things require more than just 'particles'. You are incredulous about physicalism. I suppose MUH is typically spun as a foundation for physicalism.I do believe that MUH is defective, however. Other than the problem of change, I also believe that things like consciousness, ethics, aesthetics and so on require more than just 'math'.
Patterner
You're right. Even even in regards to other humans, we can only assume. And if we assume, how far are we willing to go? Nagel discussed this in What is it like to be a bat?I said as much in the OP. It's why we cannot know what it's like to be a bat, but given that, we also cannot go around asserting that there is or is not something it is like to be X. If you're not X, then this cannot be known. — noAxioms
I assume we all believe that bats have experience. After all, they are mammals, and there is no more doubt that they have experience than that mice or pigeons or whales have experience. I have chosen bats instead of wasps or flounders because if one travels too far down the phylogenetic tree, people gradually shed their faith that there is experience there at all. Bats, although more closely related to us than those other species, nevertheless present a range of activity and a sensory apparatus so different from ours that the problem I want to pose is exceptionally vivid (though it certainly could be raised with other species). Even without the benefit of philosophical reflection, anyone who has spent some time in an enclosed space with an excited bat knows what it is to encounter a fundamentally alien form of life. — Thomas Nagel
I agree. I think experience is feeling. I think "What is it like?" Means "What does it feel like?". Not necessarily physical feeling. I think the experience of redness is a feeling. Although anyone would object if they were told all of that was about to be stripped from them, once it was stripped, once they had no feelings, there's nothing to complain about.I think if someone was going to strip away your qualia, you would object. Probably strenuously.
— Patterner
Hence 1) my falsification test mentioned in the OP, 2) the inconceivability of a p-zombie acting undetectably the same, and 3) I suspect that the ability to object at all would be stripped away with the qualia gone. Such actions rely on continuous feedback, feedback which is now gone. — noAxioms
Banno
"The universe is not composed of true statements" contains no indexical expressions. It contains no indexical terms (no “I”, “here”, “now”, “actual”, “this world”, etc.).You do think so. — noAxioms
On this account, any possible world in which you exist would be an actual world....this particular universe is the actual one due to your presence in it — noAxioms
Pretty much.That usage has both of us detecting the same public actual coffee. That usage is not a reference to the experience of the scent, only to the action of detection of the public substance. — noAxioms
noAxioms
What is being demonstrated ('proven' as you put it) is an implication of the assertion that "being consciously aware is prior to the knowledge of any facts". I don't buy that assertion, but I am not begging what follows from it.since the roomba knows — noAxioms
begs the question i.e. assumes what needs to be proven. — Wayfarer
Given your "By definition, the actual world is the one we are in", how is "The universe" in any way distinct from the form: "this world'? You label the latter indexical, but apparently deny that of the former."The universe is not composed of true statements" contains no indexical expressions. It contains no indexical terms (no “I”, “here”, “now”, “actual”, “this world”, etc.). — Banno
So does 'the universe', since it means "the actual universe" which has, by your definition, a 'we' in it."The actual world is the one we are in" is indexical. It contains "we".
You never said 'an actual world'. You said 'the actual world'. That's your wording, one that implies that your being in it makes it the one and only world that is actual....this particular universe is the actual one due to your presence in it — noAxioms
On this account, any possible world in which you exist would be an actual world.
You brought up indexicals. I brought up the fact that almost everybody's definition of 'exists' is essentially an idealistic one, which your definition illustrates quite nicely.This all seems a rather odd thing on which to focus.
He should also discuss 'what it is like to be a roomba' (my choice of X). Answer:We cannot know. That not knowing includes us not asserting that there's nothing it is like to be a roomba.Nagel discussed this in What is it like to be a bat? — Patterner
Some don't even believe that of their mothers, so Nagel is perhaps assuming a less solipsistic audience here.I assume we all believe that bats have experience. — Nagel
But that shedding of faith is important, since it implies that somewhere on our walk up that tree, experience (if a binary thing) suddenly turned on, something its immediate ancestor lacked. If this 'experience' is more of an analog thing (X is more conscious than Y), then we entertain that notion that we may very well still be incredibly low on that scale.I have chosen bats instead of wasps or flounders because if one travels too far down the phylogenetic tree, people gradually shed their faith that there is experience there at all.
I did pull out of the woods in a canoe, at twilight. A cloud of mosquitoes came out with us and tracked the canoe (laden with firewood) across the lake. Two bats emerged, flew around us for about 5 seconds, and then the cloud was gone. I was impressed.anyone who has spent some time in an enclosed space with an excited bat knows what it is to encounter a fundamentally alien form of life. — Thomas Nagel
But Chalmers apparently thinks otherwise, that the thing stripped of feeling would behave undetectably the same. A lot of his argument hinges that unreasonable assumption.I agree. I think experience is feeling. I think "What is it like?" Means "What does it feel like?". Not necessarily physical feeling. I think the experience of redness is a feeling. Although anyone would object if they were told all of that was about to be stripped from them, once it was stripped, once they had no feelings, there's nothing to complain about.
boundless
Well, 'qualitative' apparently is a word reserved for life forms, and since non-living things can know stuff (see roomba example just above) — noAxioms
Again, the experience of both interpretations is identical, so if it isn't compatible with eternalism, then it isn't compatible with presentism either. Both have you experiencing flow of time. I have a hard time with free will since there's no way to detect it one way or another. It also seems to make no predictions. — noAxioms
It's simply run by rules, none of which seem to contradict its operation. — noAxioms
If it was invented, it wouldn't be fundamental, but rather supervening on this inventor. So no argument here either. — noAxioms
2+3 sums up to 5. That works whether those values are real or not. Some disagree. — noAxioms
You mean you think those things require more than just 'particles'. You are incredulous about physicalism. I suppose MUH is typically spun as a foundation for physicalism. — noAxioms
Patterner
As I think consciousness is fundamental, a property of matter just as things like mass and charge are, and I think information processing is what makes a system conscious as a unit, I think a Roomba is conscious as a unit. However, it does not have the complexity of multiple integrated information processing systems for it to experience the kinds of thinking and awareness we do.Nagel discussed this in What is it like to be a bat?
— Patterner
He should also discuss 'what it is like to be a roomba' (my choice of X). Answer:We cannot know. That not knowing includes us not asserting that there's nothing it is like to be a roomba. — noAxioms
I have never read any of the old classics, either. But I've read, or am reading, a few newer things. Anyway, the implications of physics don't include anything about consciousness. The physical is what is experiencing, to be sure. We are physical, after all. But how that can be is not implied by physics.I know Nagel is famous for the bats, but I've actually never read any of the famous works by anybody. Most of them were published before modern physics and its implications were known, and so they all lean on classical assumptions, assumptions we know today to be false. Not saying Nagel is wrong. Just that I'm uninformed. I appreciate the quotes. — noAxioms
Certainly. He is trying to examine consciousness. His audience isn't anyone who doesn't believe anything other than themself is conscious.I assume we all believe that bats have experience.
— Nagel
Some don't even believe that of their mothers, so Nagel is perhaps assuming a less solipsistic audience here. — noAxioms
He isn't saying that. He's just trying to find something close enough to us that those who believe things other than us are conscious will agree is conscious, but different enough that we can't really imagine what it's experience is like. For all the similarities you mention, we can't know what it is like to exist with as creatures who have echolocation as our primary sense every waking moment, and to fly and capture our food and eat it while doing so. As he says, our imagination can only get us so far:I have chosen bats instead of wasps or flounders because if one travels too far down the phylogenetic tree, people gradually shed their faith that there is experience there at all.
-Nagel
But that shedding of faith is important, since it implies that somewhere on our walk up that tree, experience (if a binary thing) suddenly turned on, something its immediate ancestor lacked. — noAxioms
It's like empathy. The goal isn't to think of how I would feel in that situation. The goal is to try to understand how the person in that situation is feeling.Insofar as I can imagine this (which is not very far), it tells me only what it would be like for me to behave as a bat behaves. But that is not the question. I want to know what it is like for a bat to be a bat. — Nagel
Perhaps Chalmers is not always right.But Chalmers apparently thinks otherwise, that the thing stripped of feeling would behave undetectably the same. A lot of his argument hinges that unreasonable assumption. — noAxioms
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