Cats demonstrate purposeful behavior. You're calling this belief. — frank
Whether we want to conflate purposefulness with belief is a decision made at the level of language game, not philosophy. Right? — frank
anything you say from a phenomenological perspective about your experience of colour is only selective and filtered data from your memory of having that experience ... — Isaac
...your memory of having that experience which is no more accurate than interpreted data from third parties. — Isaac
the reporting in a discussion of such 'experiences' would still themselves be memories, and so flawed. — Isaac
This seems to be the perennial trick of the idealists and woo-merchants. To point out that empirical data has flaws (subjectivity, the necessity of an observer etc) and then for some reason assume this counts as an argument in favour of alternative methods of discussion. Pointing out that one approach is flawed does not count as support for another unless you can show that it is not similarly flawed, and in this case you can't. — Isaac
Belief is correlations drawn between things. — creativesoul
Yeah, but the thing about hard-wiring is that you can't hardwire everything about a changing environment. We can't even do this with computers. That's why humans, animals and neural networks need to learn things. So a cat is hardwired to hunt, but it has to learn about hunting. And we're hardwired to think of other minds. But we still have to learn about other humans. — Marchesk
Belief is correlations drawn between things.
— creativesoul
This statement would be a reflection on your own folk psychology (specifically mind-reading.) — frank
Belief is correlations drawn between things. — creativesoul
Cats demonstrate purposeful behavior. You're calling this belief. — frank
A robot has a relationship with its environment as well. Humans are part of the environment. To assert that humans are somehow special in this regard, is unwarranted.To return to the original issue, an experience is a relation between yourself and the things in your environment (say, the coffee). Experience is a term that applies to humans but not to robots. Not because humans have Cartesian minds (where they have internal experiences), but because humans have different capabilities to robots. A human's practical contact with the world instantiates differently to a robot's. — Andrew M
That's pretty much it. We use talk of beliefs in order to explain human behaviour. We can extend this to cats, but the belief is not a thing in the mind of the cat; it's just a pattern of behaviour. That is, the belief is not in the cat, but in the explanation. — Banno
Long story short, I think kicking happens out there in the world, not in people's minds (it's a kind of relation, which is part of the physicist's toolkit). However it doesn't follow that it has an independent existence apart from individuals. Which is why it is abstract, not concrete. — Andrew M
Then how should we think about these correlations? — frank
What is there that cannot be characterised as "correlations drawn between things"? — Banno
Can an infant have a belief? Can a cat think? — Daemon
Qualia aversion is a serious condition that often goes undiagnosed. Symptoms include need for public reassurance and an inability to introspect. — Marchesk
In order for conscious experience to have been able to have gradually emerged over an evolutionary timeline, it must have been able to have begun at some simple, basic, and/or rudimentary level of complexity, and continue to grow and evolve in it's complexity over sufficient time and repetition into something like exactly what we're doing here and now. — creativesoul
I was just explaining to Isaac that his cherished objectivity stems from subjectivity, rather than being the opposite of subjectivity — Olivier5
You’re crossing a line there. But then, I think you’re a ‘continental philosopher’. — Wayfarer
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.