There are variations in our biological machinery.
— creativesoul
Of course. That variation somehow produces the color difference. — Marchesk
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
— Luke
I do not. Nor need I. — creativesoul
“Since we both learned color words by being shown public colored objects, our verbal behavior will match even if we experience entirely different subjective colors.”
— Luke
Those entirely different subjective colors are always like the little man who wasn't there. — creativesoul
They're quite clearly not entirely different. — creativesoul
We all pick out the red ones. — creativesoul
By all means, I wish someone would at least offer some sort of explanation for using these words. If it's useful for picking out or emphasizing the subjective, phenomenal aspects of experience, then surely one of the proponents would utilize the tool by doing so.
Which aspects exactly? — creativesoul
You said that “we do sometimes know what others are experiencing when seeing a red cup”. How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup? — Luke
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
— Luke
I do not. Nor need I.
— creativesoul
But you claimed that you do know... — Luke
Experience, at least insofar as we are aware of it, just is subjective, phenomenal, qualitative and felt — Janus
What would it mean to say that aspects of experience are illusory — Janus
By all means, I wish someone would at least offer some sort of explanation for using these words. If it's useful for picking out or emphasizing the subjective, phenomenal aspects of experience, then surely one of the proponents would utilize the tool by doing so.
Which aspects exactly?
— creativesoul
How colours appear to each of us, for starters, e.g. what a colour in the chart above "looks like" to you. — Luke
You said that “we do sometimes know what others are experiencing when seeing a red cup”. — Luke
Illusions and hallucinations of seeing red cups are not conscious experience of seeing red cups. — creativesoul
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
— Luke
I do not. Nor need I. — creativesoul
Which aspects of conscious experience of seeing red cups are we picking out and emphasizing - to the exclusion of all else - when we say "qualia"? — creativesoul
I do not know what you’re experiencing when seeing a red cup. — khaled
I do not know what you’re experiencing when seeing a red cup — khaled
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
— Luke
I do not. — creativesoul
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
I do not. — creativesoul
If the experience is identical but in one there is a red cup in the other there is a drawing of a red cup how do we differentiate? — khaled
...“the experience of red cups always includes red cups” needs explanation. — khaled
Illusions and hallucinations of seeing red cups are not conscious experience of seeing red cups.
— creativesoul
So what are they... — khaled
What you mean by “the experience of red cups always includes red cups” needs explanation. Do you mean “the experience of red cups for me is identical to others” in which case I think we both would disagree. Otherwise do you mean “the experience of red cups includes what each of us individually classifies as a red cup” which is literally what I said? Because it seems to be the latter from your replies. — khaled
Then what you call “experience” we call “Qualia” — khaled
That somehow you can think you’re experiencing something while actually you’re not experiencing anything. That’s what an “illusion” is, something that you think is there but isn’t. — khaled
I'm puzzled as to why some seem to be so attached to a term, which is unclear, ambiguous and unnecessary, not to mention potentially confusing. — Janus
'I experienced the taste of the apple' or 'I perceived the taste of the apple' (even there it would be better to simply say 'I tasted the apple') but how would you use 'qualia' in that sentence? — Janus
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
I do not. — creativesoul
Sure, someone who has never seen a red cup before is going to be surprised by first doing so — creativesoul
Me too! I imagine there must be some emotional attachment to the term because it is thought to support some form of idealism. — Janus
You know what I meant. Identical as in you can’t tell the difference from a first person perspective. — khaled
It's more like being baffled at how hard people are trying to undermine a perfectly reasonable concept based on unsubstantiated claims that it is "confusing" when no one else is confused by it. I'd rather we stop psychoanalysing the other side though as it is usually a hidden ad hom that does nothing to further discussion. — khaled
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