On the contrary, it is what is so. — Banno
This is not the case. We can refer to the flower, and alternately, we can refer to the experience of the flower. — Banno
That said, I have to correct myself. 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". 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
Qualia add nothing helpful to the conversation:
What is gained by talk of the-qual-of-the-flower that is not found in talk of the red flower? — Banno
This has already been addressed twice. — Kenosha Kid
That said, I have to correct myself. 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". 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
No mysteries. Dennett got himself taken very seriously by two generations of neuroscientists with his philosophical contributions of elucidating vague (folk) concepts which they were using. And the "hard pseudo-problem" was dis-solved by Dennett et al nearly a quarter century ago. (NB: It's only "hard" for philosophers because the explanatory gap is a scientific problem (re: phenomena) and not a philosophical one.) Chalmers' woo-of-the-gaps hustle only dupes incorrigible panpsychists, Cartesians, subjective idealists, latter-day Platonists and some neo-Kantians.One of philosophy's greatest mysteries, even more mysterious than the hard problem, is the mystery of how Daniel Dennett ascended to prominence in anglo-american philosophy. — sime
See the bolding? Isn't what you are saying here that when we attempt to refer to the flower directly we only succeed in again referring to our awareness of the flower?
Which is only to repeat the same error. Repeating yourself is not presenting an argument. — Banno
Again, when you pick the flower, you break the stem on the flower, not on anything else.
Again, you are assuming a cartesian theatre. Again, you are talking as if you were a homunculus. Again, you deny that we can talk about the things in the world, while pretending to do just that. — Banno
I'll leave you unable to distinguish between a thing and a representation of a thing, — Kenosha Kid
...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
I make that distinction, explicitly. Indeed, you do not seem to have grasped the simple point that we can talk about both our experiences and the things experienced. — Banno
I'm not going to repeat myself as your argument hasn't moved on. — Kenosha Kid
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
Indeed, you do not seem to have grasped the simple point that we can talk about both our experiences and the things experienced. — Banno
Supposing that the world is only likely is, shall we say, somewhat fraught. It takes a philosophy to make such mistakes. And better philosophy to point out the error. — Banno
all references to objects are really just references to mental models", it is you who is not able to refer to flowers. — Banno
Doubt is only possible within a context of certainty. Doubting the existence of the flowers, trees, chairs and people that make up your world is not clever, indeed it verges on the mad. — Banno
Not only that, but you seem to have me confused with Mww, quoting your reply to him instead of to me. — Banno
But I take it that you now renege on your claim that "all references to objects are really just references to mental models". So there's that. — Banno
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
If the external world is a hypothesis... — Kenosha Kid
Doubt is only possible within a context of certainty. Doubting the existence of the flowers, trees, chairs and people that make up your world is not clever... — Banno
Thee's the cartesian theatre. — Banno
We'd have much more fun discussing Rorty's mirror. — Banno
Near as I can tell, it's complete nonsense. What exactly is a "property of experience"? Or a "qualitative aspect" of an emotion? — tim wood
...direct perception... — Kenosha Kid
I'm comfortable with the fact that our models of reality will likely always be deficient — Kenosha Kid
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