What is preventing someone with urbach-wiethe disease (passing over the complications in simply correlating the condition with a lack of ability to feel fear) from saying "being scared is the experience you have on a horror ride" — Isaac
If being scared is the experience you have on a horror ride, then someone correctly identifying it as such has understood what fear is, haven't they? I don't see the contradiction. — Isaac
You can be unable to report on working memory and still have experiences.
— khaled
How could you possibly know that? — Isaac
Perception involves the minimisation of prediction error simultaneously across many levels of processing within the brain’s sensory systems, by continuously updating the brain’s predictions. In this view, which is often called ‘predictive coding’ or ‘predictive processing’, perception is a controlled hallucination, in which the brain’s hypotheses are continually reined in by sensory signals arriving from the world and the body. ‘A fantasy that coincides with reality,’ as the psychologist Chris Frith eloquently put it in Making Up the Mind (2007) — https://aeon.co/essays/the-hard-problem-of-consciousness-is-a-distraction-from-the-real-one
It’s fear. For that, see Thomas Nagel’s essay, Evolutionary Naturalism and the Fear of Religion. (Sorry if I’m overburdening you with reading materials. :yikes: ) — Wayfarer
So the model is of entities interacting in a relational sense, rather than a model where the world is divided in a physical/mental sense. — Andrew M
Nagel has written a lot on this, including the essay that made him famous, 'What is it like to be a bat?' — Wayfarer
Nothing prevents them from saying it. But they haven't had said experience. Therefore they do not know what they're talking about. — khaled
The contradiction is you saying that fear is a public concept and not an experience and at the same time that fear is an experience. — khaled
For instance, if Helen Keller never learned to communicate with people, I would still assume she was conscious. — khaled
I wonder why that is. :chin: — Marchesk
it sure as hell seemed like you were arguing along eliminativist lines to me and others in this thread. In fact, in the very post before your reply to me you're doing it again. Replacing the experience of fear with talk of a model and public convention. — Marchesk
Because brains are just lumps of biological matter with electrical and chemical activity. Just looking at it isn't going to tell us what any of it's doing any more than looking at a microprocessor is going to tell us what software is on it. — Isaac
Since we've absolutely no reason to presume phenomenological reports are always accurate — Isaac
One of the possible mappings of brain activities to phenomenological experience is via public models like 'fear'. Why would you rule that out? — Isaac
What matters is that phenomenological experiences exist and need to be accounted for. We see colors. We feel emotions, pains, taste food. We dream. We visualize. Many of us have inner dialog. We relive memories at times. — Marchesk
I don't know wha it means to say fear is a public model. I can't always tell when someone is afraid. — Marchesk
Same can be said of colour, tastes, memories... the more we look, the more useful an explanation this model provides. — Isaac
It's not about you telling if someone else is afraid. It's about them deciding that they themselves are afraid. — Isaac
I see what you mean here. If at any given time the only variable that really is 'varying' in the system is the hidden state, then we can appropriately talk about a direct causal relationship. Like triggering a pinball, the various flippers and pegs are going to be determinate of it's path, but they're fixed, so right now it's path is directly caused by the strength of the trigger? — Isaac
So, if we want to answer the question "what are people modelling?" I think the only answer can be 'hidden states', if they were any less than that then the whole inference model wouldn't make any sense. No-one 'models' and apple - it's already an apple.
I'd agree here. Do you recall our conversation about how the two pathways of perception interact - the 'what' and the 'how' of active inference? I think there's a necessary link between the two, but not at an individual neurological level, rather at a cultural sociological level. All object recognition is culturally mediated to an extent, but that cultural categorising is limited - it has functional constraints. So whilst I don't see anything ontological in hidden states which draws a line between the rabbit and the bit of sky next to it, an object recognition model which treated that particular combination of states as a single object simply wouldn't work, it would be impossible to keep track of it. In that sense, I agree that properties of the hidden sates have (given our biological and cultural practices) constrained the choices of public model formation. — Isaac
Basically, because the dorsal pathways activities in object manipulation etc will eventually constrain the ventral pathways choices in object recognition, but there isn't (as far as we know) a neurological mechanism for them to do so at the time (ie in a single perception event).
What is preventing someone with urbach-wiethe disease (passing over the complications in simply correlating the condition with a lack of ability to feel fear) from saying "being scared is the experience you have on a horror ride"
— Isaac
Nothing prevents them from saying it. But they haven't had said experience. Therefore they do not know what they're talking about. — khaled
Also, the expectations have something to do with public models, which are what we think other people would do in our situation. — Marchesk
So people like Barrett try to find out what's going on. How can a set of physiological states with no boundary and no non-overlapping properties give rise to the feeling that we're 'angry'? The answer she proposes (and with substantial empirical support) is that we use public models to infer the causes of our interocepted signals. "I've just had someone punch me, people get 'angry' when they're punched, these mental states I'm receiving data about must be 'anger'"
Same can be said of colour, tastes, memories... the more we look, the more useful an explanation this model provides. — Isaac
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