that is not found in "how this cauliflower tastes to you, now".first-person, qualitative aspect of the experience of eating cauliflower, — Luke
Likewise what Dennett's intuition pumps demonstrate is that, when considering a particular individual interacting with a particular object, there's nothing added by considering the objects of subjective experience of that individual of that object. — Kenosha Kid
A memory is also a qual?...we don't know *which* qualia changed — Kenosha Kid
Intuition pump #1: watching you eat cauliflower.
There is a way this cauliflower tastes to you right now. Well, no. the taste changes even as you eat it, even as the texture changes as you chew.
Back to Wittgenstein: how could you tell that your qualia had been inverted, so that what was once blue is now red, as opposed to say, your memory had changed, so what you always saw as red you now recall, erroneously, previously seeing as blue?
I suspect we agree that the additional philosophical jargon is needless. — Banno
How do you know? What's your justification for thinking it is the same number? Could you never be mistaken here? — Banno
who needs the philosophical term "qualia" when "music" or "colors" or "sensations" exist and can do any philosophical work that "qualia" was made up to do? — Olivier5
we can more easily describe experienced shapes and their numbers in relation to configurations and numbers of neurons, than we can describe the quality of "blue" in relation to the qualities of neurons when we don't even know their qualities (we don't have a conscious experience of them, probably). — litewave
If you can't know anything about the think in itself, then why insist on talking about it?
It drops out of the conversation. — Banno
The point of philosophy is to start with something so simple as not to seem worth stating and to end with something so paradoxical that no one will believe it — Russell, 1918
We keep moving the goal posts, aka the Cartesian Theater fallacy. That's a fallacy I think was coined by Dennett, but ironically I think he himself violates. It's neurons encoding for this or that.. but then encoding itself has to be explained as for why it is mental states. The problem lies in positing a hidden dualism. Mental states exist, yes or no? — schopenhauer1
I do think that the "neural representations" favoured by the likes of Dennett and Frankish (thanks for the links) are questionable as being probably ghosts of "the idea idea", and other mentalisms. Hence the prevaricating in 3.3 Who is the audience?. And the possible own goal, if
An appearance of something which isn't there.
— Marchesk
gets supposed as a thing located in the head, to the delight and justified exasperation of dualists everywhere. — bongo fury
Fair enough. Let's talk of colours, smells, feelings, tastes, timbres and tunes then. — Olivier5
It's not like if you pile on more physical explanations, "poof" mental states appear. — schopenhauer1
But for my part I will maintain that nothing has been added by talking of the
first-person, qualitative aspect of the experience of eating cauliflower,
— Luke
that is not found in "how this cauliflower tastes to you, now".
SO I still find the notion of qualia oddly hollow. — Banno
What Dennett means remains unclear to me, and I suspect to his proponents as well. Ambiguity has its advantages. As for Banno, he seems to accept that we experience qualitative sensations inside our head, such as colours, or the timbre of a musical instrument (the “sound of trumpet”). He just doesn’t think the word « qualia » adds anything useful to his conceptual tool box.Hopefully, Banno and Dennett mean, merely, external stimulus sets, while you mean, specifically, qualia (or some such) in the head? — bongo fury
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