Good to know about this analogy. I had always thought of the subjectivity of experience, mostly of colour and that there was no way to deduce that my image of colour green is remotely similar to someone else's image of the colour green.Wittgenstein's beetle-in-the-box deserves a shout out here as well. — Marchesk
The advantage of illusionism over outright eliminativism is that it acknowledges we do very much seem to have these rich phenomenal experiences, leading to the concept of qualia. But our introspection is unreliable. Colors, sounds, feels, etc. are useful fictions consolidating an overwhelming amount of information and processing into something an organism can easily act upon. And this is why consciousness seems to be so hard to explain. — Marchesk
Thus, illusionism is not denying there is something it's like. That's the illusion. — Marchesk
What's the difference between experiencing the illusion of qualia and experiencing qualia themselves? — Echarmion
What difference does it make in any practical capacity? — Echarmion
One leads to a hard problem and one doesn't. — Marchesk
An analogy used is that the illusion is like a computer desktop, which is a useful abstraction for users, while the underlying computer system is quite different from the visual interface. — Marchesk
How does the brain introspect, and when a brain introspects, why doesn't it experience an arrangement of excited neurons rather than the qualia of colors, shapes, sounds, etc.,? — Harry Hindu
For something to be useful, it has to have some sort of connection with real states of affairs in the environment. — Harry Hindu
I don't understand how a "fiction" is useful for anything but entertainment, — Harry Hindu
That strikes me as a we bit circular. The hard problem is the reason we are even considering the approach. — Echarmion
But since, in that scenario, we are the computer desktop, it seems entirely irrelevant (much like the simulation hypothesis, incidentally). — Echarmion
That's the problem... — creativesoul
Yes, but this is a rejection of the hard problem, while explaining why we mistakenly think there is one. — Marchesk
Yes, the brain is presenting an "interface" to itself. Some people have suggested this is for an greater ability to reflect instead of just automatic responses. — Marchesk
And what are the implications, other than that the hard problem doesn't exist? — Echarmion
An analogy used is that the illusion is like a computer desktop, which is a useful abstraction for users, while the underlying computer system is quite different from the visual interface. — Marchesk
True, but it's also being used as a metaphor. Illusionists aren't saying there's literally a computer-like graphical display in the brain. — Marchesk
Also because vision is just one of the senses, and we should be mindful not to base too much philosophical argument based on vision alone. — Marchesk
and a mirage would be an illusion within the "illusion" of consciousness, — Harry Hindu
It seems like we have.... — Marchesk
If we do actually possess phenomenal consciousness, then how do we know about it? — Marchesk
we do very much seem... — Marchesk
Which presumably neuroscience will uncover at some point, if the position is correct. — Marchesk
How does the brain introspect, and when a brain introspects, why doesn't it experience an arrangement of excited neurons rather than the qualia of colors, shapes, sounds, etc.,?
— Harry Hindu
Why would the brain produce a qualia of colors, shapes, sounds, etc.? Qualia aren't compatible with neuroscience. That's why it's called the hard problem. — Marchesk
If the world isn't colored in, or sound or feel like we experience it, then how can you say that there are brains that produce qualia? It seems to me that minds produce brains - which is a 3-dimensional colored shape as we experience it. What is it really "out there" - brains or minds? How does a mind "fictionalize" other minds - as brains?For something to be useful, it has to have some sort of connection with real states of affairs in the environment.
— Harry Hindu
Yes, but I take it this position is assuming indirect realism. It's certainly assuming that science has shown that the world is not colored in, doesn't sound or taste or feel like we experience it. — Marchesk
That's more of a model, or representation. I don't think "illusion" or "fiction" would be the proper terms to use here. The illusion would be to mistake the representation for reality, just as a mirage is to mistake the behavior of light over a heated surface for a pool of water.A fiction would be useful for hiding the overwhelming complexity an organism is dealing with. But you raise some good question I don't know enough to answer. — Marchesk
and a mirage would be an illusion within the "illusion" of consciousness,
— Harry Hindu
I'm not sure whether this is a pro or con. Maybe the fact that we're subject to illusions and hallucinations suggests that the entire thing is illusiory. Why would genuine qualia be subject to illusion? — Marchesk
If the world isn't colored in, or sound or feel like we experience it, then how can you say that there are brains that produce qualia? It seems to me that minds produce brains - which is a 3-dimensional colored shape as we experience it. What is it really "out there" - brains or minds? How does a mind "fictionalize" other minds - as brains? — Harry Hindu
This is a contradiction, as I was trying to point out before. If you're going to claim that our mind is an illusion and that naive realism cannot be the case, then how can you even claim that brains exist, as brains are concepts that stem from our experience with the world? You can't have your cake and eat it too.Inference to the best explanation, given the overwhelming data from studies, experiments and various medical cases we have now.
Science is not compatible with the world being colored in, full of sound, feels, etc. But this was known to an extent in ancient philosophy. Full-blown naive realism is cannot be the case. Now maybe a sophisticated version of direct realism can work, but not one that places our perceptual sensations out there in the world. — Marchesk
The self is is itself a useful fiction. Don't Buddhists consider it to be an illusion? — Marchesk
[Materialism] seeks the primary and most simple state of matter, and then tries to develop all the others from it; ascending from mere mechanism, to chemism, to polarity, to the vegetable and to the animal kingdom. And if we suppose this to have been done, the last link in the chain would be animal sensibility - that is knowledge - which would consequently now appear as a mere modification or state of matter produced by causality. Now if we had followed materialism thus far with clear ideas, when we reached its highest point we would suddenly be seized with a fit of the inextinguishable laughter of the Olympians. As if waking from a dream, we would all at once become aware that its final result - knowledge, which it reached so laboriously, was presupposed as the indispensable condition of its very starting-point, mere matter; and when we imagined that we thought matter, we really thought only the subject that perceives matter; the eye that sees it, the hand that feels it, the understanding that knows it. Thus the tremendous petitio principii reveals itself unexpectedly. — Schopenhauer
Our perceptual sensations are out there in the world if there are other minds. — Harry Hindu
How can you even claim that science has provides answers if we don't get at the real states-of-affairs of the universe in some way. — Harry Hindu
An indirect realist understands that objects have properties that our perceptions represent. If you understand causation, you understand that effects are not their causes. No, the apple isn't red, it is ripe. I get at it's ripeness (property of the apple) by experiencing redness (property of my mind). It doesn't make sense to talk about direct vs. indirect if I can get at the truth - which the state of ripeness of the apple. If you had direct access, and I had indirect access, but we both realized the apple is ripe, then what exactly is the meaningful difference?"Out there in the world" is understood to be mind-independent. Naive realism assumes that objects have all the properties we perceive them to have, the way we perceive them. That has been shown to be wrong. The mind-independent world is not simply a reflection of our perceptions. Not unless you're a subjective idealist. — Marchesk
Science is based on making as many observations as possible from all perspectives. If science is based on observation and science wants to claim that those observations are illusions, then then scientists have pulled the rug out from under themselves.Of course I'm assuming science is providing answers based on some correlation with the real world. But there is a long standing problem of perception. Which is why skepticism never completely goes away, and people come to different metaphysical conclusions about the nature of reality. — Marchesk
Science is based on observations, which entails colors, sounds and feelings representing the world as it isScience is not compatible with the world being colored in, full of sound, feels, etc. — Marchesk
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