Aside from saving me from prepending every reference to an object with "my experience of"...... — Kenosha Kid
Collapsing the distinction between a thing and my experience of it eliminates the language to ask interesting and relevant questions — Kenosha Kid
....acknowledging the shorthand allows me to ponder how we get from currents along optic nerves to experienced images. — Kenosha Kid
Ya know.....if reference to an object is the experience, or the possible experience, then qualia is itself a prepending, which was the ground of the negation argument from the beginning. — Mww
Would your acknowledgement indicate qualia are meant to replace representations, as a consequence of empirical knowledge? — Mww
shows that qualia are not widely accepted in the professional philosophical community. — Banno
I think the collapse we're talking about is hardcore idealism. — frank
I didn’t get that from the statement. I take KK to be very far from an idealist, so I guess that’s why I didn’t make that connection. — Mww
But if you collapse the distinction between perception and object, doesn't that mean the world is the content of perception? — frank
I realize those on the forum who advocate this kind of collapse don't mean to take this step, but how would one avoid it? — frank
if reference to an object is the experience, or the possible experience...
— Mww
If... Is this you introducing the idea, or a mistranslation of mine? — Kenosha Kid
Aside from saving me from prepending every reference to an object with "my experience of" — Kenosha Kid
shorthand for reference to the experience of the object. — Kenosha Kid
When I refer to the red flower, I am generally referring to my experience of it. — Kenosha Kid
Properties of those experiences are therefore also interesting, and we have the word 'qualia' for them. — Kenosha Kid
I'm interested in the bit between photons hitting my retina and me perceiving a red flower. — Kenosha Kid
I just meant collapsing the distinction between objects and our experiences of them in language doesn't seem helpful for talking specifically about experience. — Kenosha Kid
Introduction. I hope I didn’t mistranslated. — Mww
So we arrive at a thesis for qualia, in that for you, they provide properties of experiences. — Mww
I suppose this to mean making them the same. Not an issue for me, insofar as I hold them to be distinct necessarily, therefore the collapsing one to or into the other, is unintelligible. — Mww
I haven't realised that. That is, they don't seem to be trying to avoid that absurd conclusion to me. But you've been here longer than I have, so you'd know I suppose — Kenosha Kid
So we arrive at a thesis for qualia, in that for you, they provide properties of experiences.
— Mww
They _are_ properties of experience, by definition, aren't they? — Kenosha Kid
the seeming of qualia — Kenosha Kid
When I refer to the red flower, I am doing so as a shorthand for my experience of the red flower. — Kenosha Kid
Then, of course, all references to objects are really just references to mental models, to hypotheses about an us-independent reality that with overwhelming likelihood exists, but that we have no direct knowledge of. — Kenosha Kid
Data comes in via the senses.
The (unconscious, system-oney) brain integrates, transforms, filters, and annotates that data to build a model.
Then either:
1. We experience (conscious, system-twoey) that model, that experience has properties, those properties are called qualia, or
2. Those models have properties, we experience those properties, experience of those properties are what we're calling qualia. — Kenosha Kid
Or join Hanover in failing to commit to the red flower's existing. — Banno
No, I commit to all of reality, I won't cherry-pick. What I don't commit to is the fantasy of direct knowledge of objects. — Kenosha Kid
I put it to you that we can refer to two distinct things: the flower and the perception of the flower. — Banno
Hence,it is not the case that we always refer to the experience fo the flower. — Banno
Just as I might refer to "the red flower" as a shorthand for "my experience of a red flower", I'm also apt to refer to the object itself as "the red flower" as a shorthand for "the (hypothesed) object that causes my experience of the red flower". — Kenosha Kid
It describes the situation as if one were looking at a mental model of the flower; but that is not what is happening. The mental model is not something we observe, so much as part of our very act of observing. — Banno
Then why not commit to direct perceptual access of vague objects? — sime
I see representationalism entailing some degree of acceptance of qualia. — Hanover
So there's no consensus among professional philosophers regarding the nature of perceptual experience. — Marchesk
I am conscious of the representation. — Kenosha Kid
That strikes me as question-begging. No, you are conscious of the flower. It is not until you have studied philosophy that you might mistakenly come to think of yourself as conscious of a model of the flower. — Banno
Again, the model is part of your being aware of the flower. — Banno
But consider this: when you pick the flower, it is the flower that has it's stem broken, not the model. — Banno
That makes no sense. — Kenosha Kid
When I refer to the red flower, I am doing so as a shorthand for my experience of the red flower. — Kenosha Kid
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