So, I'm asking any of the proponents of Qualia...
What meets these standards? Better yet what could? — creativesoul
Yes, I do consider it as a possibility. Do you consider it a possibility that there could be differences in our colour vision (yours and mine), however slight? — Luke
But, again, if how the colour of the apple appears to a normally-sighted person was public (and not private), then we shouldn't need to ask them in order to find out. — Luke
Your reference to "how the colour...appears to a...person" is all that I mean by qualia, so why do you get to avoid "the Cartesian theatre model of perception" but I don't? — Luke
So how does this model deal with disagreements about what is perceived? Via norms that function much like the standard meter length bar that used to be held in Paris. If you want to check whether the apple is red, find a normally-sighted person and ask them.
— Andrew M
Like that blue/gold dress? — Marchesk
The dress itself was confirmed as a royal blue "Lace Bodycon Dress" from the retailer Roman Originals, which was actually black and blue in colour; — Real colours of dress confirmed - Wikipedia
Because you're describing your perceptions and experiences as private and inaccessible to others. That's the Cartesian theater model of perception.
— Andrew M
That our perceptions and experiences are private and inaccessible to others is a fact, which empiricists should respect I think. I cannot read your mind and you cannot read mine. René Descartes did not invent this fact. — Olivier5
Sure, there is a difference between being in pain and pretending to be in pain. No one has denied that. — Banno
It seems the dress retailers are not familiar with the Cartesian "facts". — Andrew M
That would be true if there were an intermediary (phenomenal) layer between the person and the world that they are perceiving. That intermediary layer is what I'm rejecting.
Now a color-blind person's experience... — Andrew M
And what is the difference exactly? — khaled
However the problem is this is a self imposed limit that doesn’t need to be there. I can be in pain. I can also pretend to be in pain. There is a very distinct difference in my experience in both cases. Even if this difference was not testable for in a lab, I see no reason we shouldn’t be able to express it since we can clearly imagine the difference. — khaled
So you would now extend qualia to imaginings as well as experiences....how do you talk about imagination without talking about Qualia? If there was no X and Y, no “middle man” then what exactly is imagination? — khaled
Well, in the one case, the person is in pain; whereas, and in contradistinction, in the other, they are not. — Banno
Again, think back to the speech altering device + light altering glasses example, now imagine we removed the speech altering device and now I’m just straight up lying and saying the inverse color each time. Am I still seeing a red apple? — khaled
Correct. Now what’s the difference? Assume I do not understand what the word “pain” means. What does it mean to be in pain vs to not be in pain in the absence of a scientific method of telling the difference? You insist that there is a difference so what is it? — khaled
Answer your own question; what is added to the understanding of pain by introducing qualia? — Banno
Again, think back to the speech altering device + light altering glasses example, now imagine we removed the speech altering device and now I’m just straight up lying and saying the inverse color each time. Am I still seeing a red apple? — khaled
The middle man. The X and Y. That’s what Qualia is. And introducing it is what allows people to first understand words such as “red” “bitter” and “pain”. If you want to explain what pain is to someone you say something like “the experience that occurs when you stub your toe”. That satisfies as an explanation because there is a specific experience X that occurs every time you stub your toe. Without Qualia, without there being some middle man (an experience) that occurs each time you stub your toe, you would never be able to explain to children what “red” or “pain” or “bitter” means. The word would simply have no referent. What is added by Qualia is an actual referent. — khaled
Adding "qualia" into the explanation achieves nothing. — Banno
Did you read The Mark of Zombie? — Banno
I see no point in going over it again. Cutting it short, "red" refers to red things, not red experiences or qualia or anything else. The referent of "red" is the extension of "red". — Banno
It seems you are not particularly familiar with facts either....That our perceptions and experiences are private and inaccessible to others is a fact, which empiricists should respect I think. I cannot read your mind and you cannot read mine. René Descartes did not invent this fact.
— Olivier5
It seems the dress retailers are not familiar with the Cartesian "facts". — Andrew M
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