I disagree in that we can say some of their experiences might be fundamentally different from our own, because they have a form of perception we don't. What that is, we cannot say.
It's just noting a hard limit to our understanding, at least as things stand now. — Marchesk
When we're reporting upon another's conscious experience, in order to know what we're talking about, we must be able to take that conscious experience into proper account.
Agree? — creativesoul
That's the position I'm arguing for/from — creativesoul
Here comes the death knell. — creativesoul
ou can't tell us what qualia are, because they are ineffable. — Banno
I don't undestand what you mean by "consciousness" then. — Marchesk
It'll never stay dead. — Banno
Added to which, in Descartes there is the tendency to objectify the mind. 'Res cogitans' means 'thinking thing'. It was from that, that the self-contradictory concept of 'thinking substance' developed. Whereas pre-Cartesian philosophy didn't conceive of it in those terms. — Wayfarer
BTW- excellent passage from Phil. of Mind. :up: — Wayfarer
A hylomorphic approach to mental phenomena differs in a fundamental way from many of the mind-body theories considered so far. Most of those theories are committed in some way to the idea that mental phenomena are inner states, ones that occur "in the head," so to speak, in an interior domain such as a brain or Cartesian mind.
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Hylomorphists' commitment to externalism is closely related to their rejection of the inner experience thesis. Hylomorphists deny that our experiences are things that occur "in our heads" so to speak. Instead, they say, our experiences occur in the world. Consider an example: perception. Exponents of the inner mind picture often suggest that our perceptual experiences consist in having internal representations of the external world, but hylomorphists reject the idea that our experiences are internal states that mirror external things. They claim instead that our experiences are patterns of interaction involving individuals, properties, and events in the real world itself. — Philosophy of Mind: A Comprehensive Introduction p314, p321 - William Jaworski
You cannot explain it because there is no it...
— creativesoul
There is a conscious visual experience with red in it. — Marchesk
Is it just a conflict about what qualia is? — frank
The ability to attribute meaning. — creativesoul
So you have your own definition for consciousness.
Wouldn't that better fall under intentionality, cognition or intelligence? — Marchesk
You can't tell us what qualia are, because they are ineffable. — Banno
And you cannot show them to us, because they are private. — Banno
They claim instead that our experiences are patterns of interaction involving individuals, properties, and events in the real world itself — Philosophy of Mind: A Comprehensive Introduction p314, p321 - William Jaworski
s that what counts as an acceptable reply nowadays? — creativesoul
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
There's a misunderstanding somewhere. I do not divide the world in a physical/mental sense, or a physical/non physical sense. — creativesoul
Internal, external, that which consists of both. Conscious experience being of the third; part physical, part non physical; part internal, part external, part neither. — creativesoul
Is it acceptable to use a different definition? — Marchesk
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