If zombie-consciousness is devoid of phenomenality, what possible set of conditions could give rise to the zombie asserting phenomenality? Isn't this a petitio principii? — Pantagruel
. He relies heavily on the case of the phenomenal zombie, which is functionally and psychologically identical to him, but has no phenomenal experience. — Pantagruel
Truly conscious people — TheMadFool
Are there non-truly conscious people (apart from my wife)? — GraveItty
In essence p-zombies are using words (meaning is use) and if Wittgenstein in right, we're also doing the same — TheMadFool
If zombie-consciousness is devoid of phenomenality, what possible set of conditions could give rise to the zombie asserting phenomenality? Isn't this a petitio principii? — Pantagruel
If the zombie is the clone of a liar, ill educated, or mad person — bert1
I'm more of the opinion that consciousness in this scenario constitutes a nescio quid, such that for a zombie to make a true qualia-claim it would be referring to something to which it in principle does not have access. — Pantagruel
I am neither mad nor ill-educated.a liar, ill educated, or mad person. — bert1
hence I conclude that I'm one of the zombies and that I'm missing out on the full inexplicable-by-physics experience. — noAxioms
Neither party is lying. For it to be a lie, each being (the zombie using nothing but physics, and the 'human', as y'all put it) need to spend a moment in each other's shoes to compare. This is what the one is like, and this is the other. — noAxioms
f zombie-consciousness is devoid of phenomenality, what possible set of conditions could give rise to the zombie asserting phenomenality? Isn't this a petitio principii? — Pantagruel
I'm inclined to think it is...some form of globally coherent informational history maybe. And so, yes, theoretically translatable between mediums. — Pantagruel
I sort of agree, but see bold below. I have no evidence that anything is being me. But that doesn't mean that the zombie cannot function, perceive, etc. like any other automaton.There's nothing it's like to be a zombie. — Marchesk
I didn't really have in mind 'switching places' since lacking something being me, there's nothing to switch. Perhaps the zombie (Phil) can be possessed by something (Bob) being it for a short while. But this only lets Bob know what its like to be Phil (who is for a short while not a zombie), but Phil might not necessarily be aware of it.So for us humans switching places
I think I follow this, but disagree. A self-driving car, with driver in it, has something 'being' it and the car is 'conscious'. The car is an extension (an avatar) of the driver. Not sure how you're using 'experience' here. A self-driving car is capable of being aware of its surroundings and function on its own. That's 'experience' in my book, as distinct from 'conscious' which is the experience and control of the driver. If you use the word differently, then I need one to describe what a mechanical device does to measure the world.the same thing experientially as being unconscious.
One possible answer, is that the zombie is just programmed to say these kinds of things. If, for example, our reality is a kind of program of sorts, then it's quite possible that some being (what we refer to as a person) might just be part of the program. They act like us, they talk like us, but they lack the internal subjective experiences of a real self. It's certainly possible, but unless you were able to remove yourself from the program, it would be difficult if not impossible to tell the difference. — Sam26
If we're not conscious in the way that philosophers like Chalmers claim we are, then qualia would count as such a word in our universe. Idealism would be another. Platonism would be yet another. Not to conflate those three terms, but it demonstrates that if the world is physical, it doesn't prevent us from coming up with non-physical words. — Marchesk
Doesn't coming up with words for mere possibilities require imagination? — RogueAI
Except the zombie is supposed to be identical to me except for being conscious. — RogueAI
Yes, and this is why I said, "...they lack the internal subjective experiences of a real self," which was meant to mean they are not conscious. It's difficult to know if such a zombie would really act like a conscious being. It seems that you could in theory make them respond just like us. It would be like playing a game, say, World of Warcraft, and not knowing if you're talking with a real person or not. — Sam26
The point of course would be, how you could you tell the mental state apart from a programmed response? I don't think, in theory, you could. — Sam26
No, I see colors, hear sounds, think thoughts, and dream dreams, but I do it the zombie way without help from the outside, just like the self-driving car does. OK, the car probably doesn't dream, but it does the other things, however reluctant you might be to ascribe such terms to such a device.So you see zombie colors, hear zombie sounds, think zombie thoughts, dream zombie dreams? — Marchesk
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