Well, I suppose that's one way to deal with the confusion of the subject/object distinction. — Banno
What is a “pretheoretical condition”? — khaled
What does this mean “talk about experience as a subject matter in its own right”? Does it mean understanding words such as “red” or “bitter” etc? — khaled
So, I'm asking any of the proponents of Qualia...
What meets these standards? Better yet what could?
— creativesoul
My question would rather be: who gives a flying rat’s ass, and why? — Olivier5
The subject perceives the object through a symbolic representation... — Olivier5
When we ask “is this dress blue and black or gold and white” we ask what experience you are having. It is a fact that some people saw a white and gold dress, even though the dress was blue and black. It is furthermore a fact that you cannot tell if someone is actually seeing gold and white or only lying about it. That’s what it means that you can’t “read minds”. — khaled
I don’t understand how there can be no intermediary layer, but there can be an experience. Isn’t the experience the intermediary layer? Or else what does “experience” mean. — khaled
Also what is imagination without the intermediary phenomenological layer? — khaled
To perceive things is not at all the same as to imagine things. They are different kinds of activities. — Andrew M
From Lexico, experience is "practical contact with and observation of facts or events." Note that there is nothing there about intermediary layers, phenomenalism, or minds. — Andrew M
People's experiences sometimes differ in certain situations (reflecting differences either in the environment or in their physical characteristics). And that's a valid question to investigate. But in many situations we can predict what other people's experience will be like. I assume you and other readers would agree that the dress color looks blue and black in the image I posted. We learn which situations are like that and which aren't. — Andrew M
But then again, no one is talking about the thing in the box (Qualia), no one is trying to “eff” Qualia. What everyone here advocating for Qualia is trying to do is say that there is something in the box, labeled “Qualia”The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something; for the box might even be empty. --No, one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is. (p.100)
Personally I would rather obliterate any and all philosophical notions that lead to widespread confusion and false belie — creativesoul
say the color of the cup, is private, ineffable, and intrinsic if the experience itself consists of, or is existentially dependent upon - in any way - external things like red cups. — creativesoul
The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something; for the box might even be empty. --No, one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is. (p.100)
Private: I do not know what you’re experiencing when seeing a red cup. — khaled
It only follows that we do sometimes know what others are experiencing — creativesoul
It only follows that we do sometimes know what others are experiencing
— creativesoul
Not necessarily. Check my discussion with Banno about this. It is possible for us to be having a different experience and to still have no communication problems. — khaled
Indeed; hence, "one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is". — Banno
But also to say “I do not know what’s in your box” (private) also makes sense. — khaled
You do not know what another's conscious experience of red cups is. — creativesoul
With such an admission comes the sudden realization that one has just conceded the argument, because you do know that another's conscious experience of red cups consists - in part at least -of red cups. — creativesoul
We know that all conscious experience of red cups includes red cups — creativesoul
Ineffable" denotes that which is unable to be said; that which cannot be spoken. When pretheoretical conscious experience is ineffable, it is unable to be spoken and/or otherwise expressed by the creature having the conscious experience. This makes perfect sense. Some creatures cannot talk about past experience; all the language less ones — creativesoul
Part of the Cartesian error is to categorize unlike things together based on superficial similarities instead of making natural and functional distinctions. So visualizing, dreaming, imagining, hallucinating, etc., are considered by the Cartesian to be a kind of seeing and perception, when they are not. — Andrew M
Ineffable" denotes that which is unable to be said; that which cannot be spoken. When pretheoretical conscious experience is ineffable, it is unable to be spoken and/or otherwise expressed by the creature having the conscious experience. This makes perfect sense. Some creatures cannot talk about past experience; all the language less ones
— creativesoul
It also makes perfect sense in the case of creatures who can talk about past experience — khaled
Again, you cannot explain what “red” is to someone who’s never seen a red object. — khaled
Personally I would rather obliterate any and all philosophical notions that lead to widespread confusion and false belief given the sheer power that belief wields in this shared world of ours. — creativesoul
here are names and descriptions for and/or of unobservables. — creativesoul
here are names and descriptions for and/or of unobservables.
— creativesoul
Those unobservables aren't red. — Marchesk
I do not see why not...
There are names and descriptions for and/or of unobservables. — creativesoul
I would agree, but when it comes to people who are supposed to be describing their own conscious experience of red cups, saying that that conscious experience is ineffable is considered a flaw, not a defining feature like it is with language less conscious experience of red cups. — creativesoul
Sure, someone who has never seen a red cup before is going to be surprised by first doing so — creativesoul
Unobservables aren't experienced. But they can be described. — Marchesk
In your view, where there are only boxes and no need to talk of what’s in them... — khaled
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