o. What goes on between the ears is irrelevant. That's rather the point pushed by PI, that it's what happens that counts, not what goes on in heads. "Can I have two apples, please" is understood if I get the two apples. What happens in the head of the grocer is irrelevant. — Banno
That color and pain are models? — Marchesk
No, your account wants for nothing. It is incoherent, and hence not an account. — Banno
Unless the grocer is a serial killer who’s triggered when he’s asked for two apples. Then it kind of matters what’s going on between his ears. — Marchesk
Red cups, apples, and pains in hands are not propositional content.
— creativesoul
Can’t they be subjects or objects of propositions, hence contents of them? Or can propositions not have content? — Mww
They are most certainly always part of the correlational content of belief about them.
— creativesoul
Yes, always, with the caveat that correlational content of belief is not propositional. — Mww
I reject the subject/object framework altogether. We are both objects in the world and subjects taking account of it — creativesoul
I take similar issue with the very notion of "proposition" (....)....
Ehhhh....all discourse requires them, so we’re sorta stuck with them.
.....and the role that it plays in our experiences — creativesoul
using the word differently is equivocating. — creativesoul
To say "I have a body" instead of "I am a body" is precisely the way of thinking/ speaking that leads to Cartesian dualism. — Janus
So, yes, you're right; according to that dualistic way of thinking, the body does not have beliefs, but according to the monistic ways of thinking myself as a body, the body does indeed have beliefs; or perhaps better expressed beliefs are embodied, they are modes or dispositions of the body. — Janus
"Examples of qualia include the perceived sensation of pain of a headache, the taste of wine, as well as the redness of an evening sky. As qualitative characters of sensation, qualia stand in contrast to "propositional attitudes", where the focus is on beliefs about experience rather than what it is directly like to be experiencing." — Wikipedia
The main issue for me is that a description of a human being at a physical level should not contradict descriptions at other levels of abstraction.
— Andrew M
Ok, it seems you can't agree about the philosophical challenge. You want to settle: for different levels of description, not literally commensurable. Then, unfortunately, I have to dispute your continual claims to have risen above dualism. — bongo fury
... leads to conflating pre-theoretical language less conscious experience, pre-theoretical linguistically informed conscious experience, and theoretical linguistically informed conscious experience.
— creativesoul
Fair enough, but if the goal is to distinguish "conscious experience" from a non-conscious variety of something or other (experience?), and all three of your sub-categories fall on the positive side of the distinction, what exactly is the point of the proposed sub-division? Ah...
Only the first of the three consists entirely of directly perceptible things.
— creativesoul
Ok, I'm curious to know in what way you aren't offering to help frank here to,
Clean away the strawmen piled in the idea of phenomenal consciousness,
— frank
?
Just interested. — bongo fury
I reject the subject/object framework altogether. We are both objects in the world and subjects taking account of it
— creativesoul
How are those two assertions not contradictory?
—————— — Mww
using the word differently is equivocating.
— creativesoul
It would be if I were not setting out explicitly how I am using the word. — Banno
Sidebar: is a language-less creature one that has no language to use, or one that has no use of the language he has? — Mww
I was probably unclear. You said that an experience "describes your practical contact with things in the environment". Could you clarify whether "practical contact" is the same as "physical contact"? If so, isn't one's physical contact with the environment a concrete (i.e. physical) thing? (This would imply that an experience is a physical thing.) — Luke
Seeing red is not an experience? To be clear, I'm talking about a person seeing red (e.g. seeing a red object). — Luke
I'm not sure that I understand. You're saying it's not merely physical contact but it's also no more than physical contact...? How are robots any different in this regard? — Luke
And I would add that the practical contact is between the cup/coffee and the person, not between the person's eyes and the photons. The latter is detail about the physical process and operates at a different level of abstraction than what I'm describing here.
— Andrew M
On the one hand, there is practical contact between a person and a coffee. On the other hand, there is practical contact between a person and photons. What's the difference? What other process is there besides "the physical process"? — Luke
It's a conventional way of speaking. We also speak of a person who acts independently as having a mind of their own. But before assuming dualism, we should first investigate the contexts that give rise to those usages. — Andrew M
For you, the grocer is an object and his subjectivity is irrelevant to you. For the grocer, you are the object and your subjectivity is irrelevant to him. — Mww
Drop the notion that the stuff between your ears has primacy. The stuff you might describe as "out there" is just as valid. Minds do not come into existence by themselves, but by interacting with the world. — Banno
@Isaac might disagree, which would be interesting. Presumably, for example, there are neural structures in place in a new born that permit the development of vision. But that is not Kant's a priori concepts. — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.