Say when I look at objects A, B and C I have experiences X, X and Y. When you look at objects A, B and C you have experiences Y, Y and X. Or even Z,Z,R. When we want to communicate these experiences, we would BOTH call A “red” and C “green”.
Different experiences, shared meaning. — khaled
“Red” isn’t referring to a particular experience, (not a particular X or particular Y) but rather a shared structure (A and B are the same experience but C is different. Doesn’t matter what the actual experience is. Same structure) — khaled
Now if someone looking at the same set of objects experiences Z,Z,Z, and he learned that “Things that produce the experience Z are called red” he would be colorblind. In his world there is no distinction between C and B/A. He would look at C and say “this is red” because that’s what he learned to call objects that produce the experience Z. That’s when we know he’s colorblind. — khaled
Red” isn’t referring to a particular experience — khaled
Sort of. — Isaac
What's wrong with the following conversation (using your terms)
"What's 'red' like for you?",
"Oh when I see red I get lot's of X's and a Y"
"Yeah, I get a few Xs too, but for me it's mainly Ys, plus a Z oddly enough" — Isaac
We don't have an "outside perspective" from which we can see that I am seeing Xs and you are seeing Ys. We can't talk about the Xs and Ys. You only have access to your experiences and I only have access to mine.
Outside of a fantasy show, we can't "swap bodies" to check. — khaled
Surely Whatever these Xs and Ys are they have a physical effect — Isaac
If there's no such effect, the X isn't really different form Y, is it? — Isaac
No. Different physical effects produce Xs and Ys. We just came back from an epiphenomenalism thread. — khaled
We have a word 'decision' because we all have some feeling about having 'decided' something, even though physically no action-initiation actually took place. — Isaac
I'm saying without the equivalent for X and Y, why are we postulating their existence? — Isaac
Xs and Ys are experiences. They're that "feeling of deciding something" in epiphenomenalism. — khaled
You ask how we know our own experiences exist? You also have to answer that question then. — khaled
there's something there to be referred to so we came up with a word for it and we talk about it. — Isaac
We talk to other people about them. — Isaac
Correct. That's precisely the Xs and Ys. I just use them as placeholders. — khaled
We talk to other people about them. — Isaac
So if you never learned a language you couldn't be angry? — khaled
So they're not private then. We talk about them and have words for them. — Isaac
You didn't say anything about being, you said 'knowing'. — Isaac
So they're not private then. We talk about them and have words for them. — Isaac
No. As my example showed, you can have radically different experiences and still talk. A public language about private experiences. — khaled
But your example of radically different experiences consisted of saying that experiences of red for one person might be constituted of X,X, and Y, yet for another X, Y and Z, yes? — Isaac
We've just established that we do, in fact, have words for X, Y and Z — Isaac
The words don't refer to X and Y. But only their position in the structure. When you say "That is red" I can infer that you had some experience X. When I say "That is red" you can infer that I had some experience Y (again, these are just variable names). However you cannot infer that X and Y are the same. As they don't need to be at all. — khaled
No. It was X,X, Y and Y,Y, X. Point is it's the same structure. As in, the first two objects are the same color and the last one is different.
If you were seeing X, X, Y and I was seeing X, Y, Z when looking at 3 objects one of us is color blind. Portably you. As for you, the first and second object seem the same color. While for me all 3 are different colors. — khaled
We've just established that we do, in fact, have words for X, Y and Z — Isaac
We don't. — khaled
They're different components of experience, epiphenomenologically arisen, just like 'decision'. — Isaac
The words don't refer to X and Y. But only their position in the structure. When you say "That is red" I can infer that you had some experience X. When I say "That is red" you can infer that I had some experience Y (again, these are just variable names). However you cannot infer that X and Y are the same. As they don't need to be at all. — khaled
As long as everything that produces X for you produces Y for me, we can talk. Once something produces X for you and produces Z for me for example, we will have a disagreement about what color it is. Not because X is different from Z (as X was already different from Y but we were talking just fine), but because the structure is different. — khaled
But we have a word for 'decision' because the feeling is a part of our lives. — Isaac
So "red" cannot be referring to X (as you were having Y) and "green" cannot be referring to Y (as you were having X) — khaled
What I'm asking is why postulate that I'm having X and you Y, unless you've got some reason (my response or my subsequent words) to believe our experiences are different? If they seem the same in every conceivable way, why fabricate a possible way in which they might, nonetheless, be different? — Isaac
I am pointing out that we have just as much reason to believe they are the same as to believe they are different. — khaled
If absolutely every measure we can detect shows no difference — Isaac
We have taken no measures to examine X and Y directly. — khaled
Every measure we have taken would produce the same result were they different. Because every measure we have taken can only say things about the positions, not contents of our experiences. If you think otherwise give an example. — khaled
And identical brain activity cannot produce different experiences (otherwise there would need to be some other physical source for the epiphenomenon)? — Isaac
Then again, you never have identical brain states. Or identical brains. — khaled
X,X,Y vs X,Y,Y example. — Isaac
They may be accessible to introspection, in which case we can (and probably have) come up with words for them that way, or they may be accessible only to neuroscience or cognitive psychology, in which case we can come up with technical terms for them. — Isaac
I'd imagine that a mental health professional might disagree with you both — Luke
Yep. That's the bit I saw as circular; because your definition of individual persons contained their ability to feel pain as one of the defining factors. So you end up with "pains are subjective because they're in the list of things which are subjective". — Isaac
Why are persons defined by their ability to feel pain, but not by their having noses? — Isaac
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