↪Luke I wonder if it is what unenlightened has in mind, — Banno
We do. We can detect brain states and XXY, ZZR and KKU are directly, inseparably linked to different brain states, so we know exactly which you're having. — Isaac
What is the experience of red of someone who is colourblind but does not know it? — unenlightened
You can't explain to someone what an experience is like so I'm not sure what you're asking. As you said: The subjectivity leaves the picture. We can't talk about it. — khaled
the experience that causes you to reach for the word "Red" (X) is precisely the experience that would cause me to reach for the word "Green". — khaled
You can do an fMRI scan on both of our brains, and you wouldn't be able to extract this piece of information. We will show very similar activity. — khaled
However this set of variables is undiscoverable. Since whether or not you have XXY or LLE makes no difference as long as structure is preserved. — khaled
we have no "outside perspective" from which we can say "Ah, yes, it seems that people with this type of nose have Ls instead of Xs when looking at blood". We have no access to whether or not we are having the same Xs and Ys or how they're related. — khaled
Now you're leaving the realm of epiphenomenon. The epiphenomenon X can't 'cause' anything. — Isaac
Brain states. — Isaac
But it is discoverable because it's associated with different brain states, which we can detect. — Isaac
But we don't know if brainstate1 causes X or Y or Z or U or G. — khaled
Epiphenomenon X doesn't pre-exist. We've got no reason at all to assume it. — Isaac
The point at which I disagree is that these are intrinsically private. They're different brain states. 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
Odd. So there could be something publicly shared yet which is entirely subjective? I'm not following you. — Isaac
Like phones. My phone is 'my' phone entirely by virtue of whose legal possession it is in, no property of the actual phone. Your pain is 'your' pain entirely by virtue of whose mind it is in, not any property of the actual pain. — Isaac
So what on earth would 'intersubjective' mean? Something which takes place in multiple minds at once? Not sure where that model leaves intersubjectivity. — Isaac
would say that that we have experiences is a bit more than an assumption no? It precedes the neurology even.
Epiphenomenon X does pre-exist. The experience you get when looking at red things precedes your knowledge of whatever brainstate is behind that experience. — khaled
In the relevant Wittgensteinian sense, there could be something publicly shareable, in principle, which is entirely subjective. There are such things, such as thoughts one has which are not yet shared, unexpressed pain hiding behind a stoic disposition, a poker face, and the like. — Luke
even if it becomes shared, there remains an intrinsically private aspect - how it feels to the subject. What cannot be shared is for me to have your pains and vice versa. — Luke
Alk the evidence you have so far is that our epiphenomena are the same in response to the same stimuli. — Isaac
We reach for the same words, we understand the same implications, we even notice those who don't respond the same and single them out as being in need of help. — Isaac
Other than that we've no reason at all to assume our epiphenomena are different — Isaac
a) had a modelling assumption that unique brain states resulted in unique epiphenomena, and
b) noticed unique brain states in response to identical stimuli. — Isaac
We have no evidence of that. As I've shown, you can have radically different epiphenomena and still be able to do all of: — khaled
no reason to assume they're the same. — khaled
So the difference the fMRI detected is not necessarily a difference in the Xs and Ys but again, a difference in their structure. — khaled
Why introduce something for which there's no evidence? — Isaac
So if there's a difference of any sort whatsoever in the epiphenomena, it must result from an equivalent difference in the the causing physical phenomena. Otherwise we've invoked some other non- physical causal factor. — Isaac
What is the experience of red of someone who is colourblind but does not know it? — unenlightened
23 odd years of talking about something he could not see and not noticing that he could not see it. — unenlightened
So you seem back to intrinsically private again. If subjectivity is not the cause of a thing being intrinsically private, then what is? — Isaac
As you see above, I do not think I am red or have a red or a red experience, and I don't believe you do either. I see red things, — unenlightened
It is not a mistake. because it cannot be recognised as a thing. "I see a red apple" means I see a thing in the world that is red. There is nothing in my interior world that is red. But "an experience of red" suggests that the red is in my head in my interior world (whatever that is). But I don't see colour in my experiences, because I never look at them - my eyes point outwards not inwards. It is a linguistic construction that is mistaken for a thing The experience of seeing cannot be seen and thus cannot be coloured. Only what is seen is coloured and never the experience of seeing. — unenlightened
Hey, frank - what's your take on reality?
I think it an odd question; perhaps your answering it will make clearer what it is you are after...? — Banno
If it can be recognized by you as a thing, then by that fact, it has made a difference, and cannot be excluded as non-existent. — Metaphysician Undercover
We all "look" at our experiences, we look at them with our minds. If we didn't we'd have no memory, as that's what memory is, looking at our experiences. — Metaphysician Undercover
the schema of conceptions are entirely the product of imagination, which is sufficient reason for justifying that I can name any perception of mine, any damn thing I want.
— Mww
Right, so as I said above it is not possible to create a private language (one constructed entirely in private terms) but it is possible to have private names for things that can be pointed to. We seem to be in agreement. — Janus
Yes of course, some maps are more accurate (or less inaccurate) than others, for a given purpose. — Olivier5
Close, but not entirely. If I combine a few imagined, private, names in an organized composition, wouldn’t I have created an imagined, private language? — Mww
I guess, sure, but “more or less” is pretty open-ended and “adequate” doesn’t say much.
What’s the catch? — Mww
So, we must know something of the territory in order to be able to say that some maps (or models) are more accurate than others? — Janus
I still wouldn't be talking about "my experience of red" as if it were something similar or different to "your experience of red"...
What is the experience of red of someone who is colourblind but does not know it? — unenlightened
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