. In short, he equivocates. He does the same thing with free will. — frank
Dennett thinks people endorse things like hardness or redness because they're doing the best they can to interpret neurological functioning, not because those things are properties of experience. He speculates that the illusion of phenomenal consciousness may arise from verbal streams. In short, he equivocates. He does the same thing with free will. — frank
What two types do you think Dennett is equivocating between? And can you provide a link to some of his work that demonstrates the equivocation? — fdrake
Everything real has properties, and since I don't deny the reality of conscious experience, I grant that conscious experience has properties. I grant moreover that each person's states of consciousness have properties in virtue of which those states have the experiential content that they do. — Quining Qulaia
In other words, you can’t be a satisfied, successful illusionist until you have provided the details of how the brain manages to create the illusion of phenomenality, and that is a daunting task largely in the future. — Illusionism as the Obvious Default Theory of Consciousness
What two types do you think Dennett is equivocating between? And can you provide a link to some of his work that demonstrates the equivocation? — fdrake
Seen one constructed illusion, seen ‘em all, right? — Mww
Which just sounds like he wants to say we're conscious, but not really. Kind of like an anti-realist about dinosaur fossils. He's also expressed the ideas that consciousness might be a trick of language, a trick of the reporting mechanism, or just introspection giving us the wrong idea. But whatever it is, consciousness isn't what we think it is. Which sounds like eliminativist talk. — Marchesk
Which sounds like eliminativist talk
Dennett: Today we — most of us —are comfortable with systems of unconscious representations that influence, specify content, orient, direct memory retrieval, etc. That is as good as gospel in cognitive science. These are representations in us that contribute to our cognitive talents without being for us. (In this regard they are no different from the representations of blood sugar level or vitamin deficiency that modulate our digestive systems without engaging cerebral cortex at all.) But at some point, as Frankish puts it, we must describe:
Frankish: the sensory states that are the basis for the illusion. On most accounts, I will assume, these will be representational states, probably modality specific analogue representations encoding features of the stimulus, such as position in an abstract quality space, egocentric location, and intensity. (p. 19)
Dennett: Filling in these details will require answering a host of questions that Frankish raises:
Frankish: Is introspection sensitive only to the content of sensory states, or are we also aware of properties of their neural vehicles? Do the reactions and associations evoked by our sensory states also contribute to the illusion of phenomenality?… Are sensory states continually monitored or merely available to monitoring? Is the introspectability of sensory states a matter of internal access and influence rather than internal monitoring? (p. 19, my italics)
Dennett: I submit that, when we take on the task of answering the Hard Question, specifying the uses to which the so-called representations are put, and explaining how these are implemented neurally, some of the clear alternatives imagined or presupposed by these questions will subtly merge into continua of sorts; it will prove not to be the case that content (however defined) is sharply distinguishable from other properties, in particular from the properties that modulate the ‘reactions and associations evoked’.
The red stripe you seem to see is not the cause or source of your convictions but the intentional object of your convictions. In normal perception and belief, the intentional objects of our beliefs are none other than the distal causes of them. I believe I am holding a blue coffee mug, and am caused to believe in the existence of that mug by the mug itself. The whole point of perception and belief fixation is to accomplish this tight coalescence of causes and intentional objects. But sometimes things go awry. Suppose a gang of hoaxers manage to convince you, by a series of close encounters, that there is a space alien named Zom who visits you briefly, speaks to you on the phone, etc. The causes of your various Zom experiences can be as varied as can be, so that nothing at all in the world deserves to be identified as Zom, the intentional object of your beliefs. What are intentional objects ‘made of’? They’re not made of anything. When their causes don’t coalesce with them, they are fictions of a sort, or illusions.
Conscious experience and 3rd person data about conscious experience. — frank
What is externalism in this context? — fdrake
Dennett may be right in quining the traditional property combination of qualia — Marchesk
OK, there is some stability to the way things appear to us.
That can be said, tested, verified, and all without invoking qualia. — Banno
Qualia are defined as the way things appear to us — Olivier5
In a visual illusion, not only can we agree of its persistence but we can also “describe” how it seems like to us (a bulge in the board) which is an example of us specifically talking of qualia. — khaled
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