we don't have direct perception of objects — Kenosha Kid
That would it be to perceive “directly” rather than “indirectly”? — Srap Tasmaner
Thee's the cartesian theatre.
— Banno
Do you seriously observe no difference between recognising that we don't have direct perception of objects and a full-on subscription to dualism? I get the comparison you're making, but unfortunately it's regarding uncontroversial statements about the brain. There's plenty of examples of the brain doing processing that we're not conscious of that feeds into stuff we are conscious of. I'm certainly not conscious of how photons get converted into an image of 'red flower', and anyone who pretends they are is full of it. Calling it a Cartesian theatre or humunculus is just misleading. — Kenosha Kid
It's the assumption of an image between the perceiver and the object that suggests the dualism. That's the Cartesian theater - that we're only ever looking at images of red flowers, never red flowers. — Andrew M
What would that be that we don’t have? I’m seriously asking: what do you have in mind when you say there is a type of perception, direct perception, that human beings happen not to — well, “have” seems an odd way to put — so let’s make it: what would it be to perceive “directly” rather than “indirectly”? — Srap Tasmaner
It's the assumption of an image between the perceiver and the object that suggests the dualism. — Andrew M
Me, too. It's just that the model used in explanations of perceptions is very different from the model used in our scientific theories. — Banno
What Kenosha Kid is referring to is our responses. Speech, action, emotional responses, strategies, and more complex mental reactions. These all result from the perception of the flower, not the flower. — Isaac
(To my mind, and correct me where I'm wrong, perception and experience are not the same thing. Perception is the wibbly wobbly organisation of data into an always fleeting, always updating model of our environment. Experience is consciousness of that model. These might be two sides of the same coin, but still distinct.) — Kenosha Kid
I was hoping you'd show up and harpoon my bubbles of misunderstanding. — Kenosha Kid
1. Do you think we are conscious of the processes of forming those perceptions? (Harder question: at what point are we conscious of the causes of our perceptions? Are we conscious directly of photons incident upon retina? Of currents in optic nerves? Etc.) — Kenosha Kid
2. If we see a red flower next to a yellow flower, would you agree it at least _seems_ to us like there are two flowers with different properties, irrespective of how that seeming arises? — Kenosha Kid
nice to see you back. — Kenosha Kid
Quick catch-up:
- Banno reckons by way of Dennett that there's no need to talk about experience of a thing, we can just talk about the thing, therefore qualia are not helpful.
- My objection was that experience of a thing is not the thing itself, so there are reasons (scientific, philosophical) to discuss the former, and it's useful to have an unambiguous language to talk about it. "The red flower" is ambiguous, because while I probably am talking about my experiences, I could be talking about the causes of those experiences. — 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
Which idea of qualia am I trying to extirpate? Everything real has properties, and since I don't deny the reality of conscious experience, I grant that conscious experience has properties. I grant moreover that each person's states of consciousness have properties in virtue of which those states have the experiential content that they do. That is to say, whenever someone experiences something as being one way rather than another, this is true in virtue of some property of something happening in them at the time, but these properties are so unlike the properties traditionally imputed to consciousness that it would be grossly misleading to call any of them the long-sought qualia. Qualia are supposed to be special properties, in some hard-to-define way. My claim--which can only come into focus as we proceed--is that conscious experience has no properties that are special in any of the ways qualia have been supposed to be special. — Dennett, Quining Qualia
Perception is the wibbly wobbly organisation of data into an always fleeting, always updating model of our environment. — Kenosha Kid
....intrinsic properties of experiences that are also ineffable, nonphysical, and ‘given’ to their subjects incorrigibly (without the possibility of error)
I think that the developments of neuroscience (and cognitive psychology) mean that we have models of the process and that makes us conscious of it. — Isaac
My personal preference demotes consciousness to a fairy trivial logging process, we are 'conscious' of that which we log to memory, experience being merely the process of doing so, always post hoc, always retrospective, we're never conscious of anything in real time, it's the reviewing of what's just happened to make sense of it that forms our experience. — Isaac
Actually, what was questioned was this:
When I refer to the red flower, I am doing so as a shorthand for my experience of the red flower.
— Kenosha Kid — Banno
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
But you have corrected yourself, somewhat backhandedly. — Banno
Perhaps this is pathological, but I am not aware of these processes. I know on an intellectual level that they occur, but have no conscious experience of, say, conjuring a colour from a current, or a shape, or depth in the way that I am conscious of a red flower close to me. — Kenosha Kid
that logging process is just as apt to be called a humunculus or Cartesian theatre. I'm not sure how you avoid such accusations if anything precedes that logging that isn't also logging. — Kenosha Kid
No, this is a misrepresentation. Kenosha Kid is not suggesting that we're 'looking' at images of flowers, the 'looking' is the name we give to the entire process. What @Kenosha Kid is referring to is our responses. Speech, action, emotional responses, strategies, and more complex mental reactions. These all result from the perception of the flower, not the flower. — Isaac
It's the assumption of an image between the perceiver and the object that suggests the dualism.
— Andrew M
For you maybe. To me it suggests retina. — Kenosha Kid
I agree that we respond to things that we perceive (such as red flowers). But I was referring to KK's "image of 'red flower'". Where does that fit into the "perception" story, on your view? — Andrew M
Anyone claiming that science can solve or dissolve the hard-problem, is not only wrong, but demonstrates a profound misunderstanding of the nature and purpose of science — sime
OK, so stop me if this gets too 'new age', but how do you judge whether you have awareness of something? I don't mean that as a philosophical question, I mean it as an actual exercise to do now. Look at the red flower - you're aware of it. Think about the neurons firing from your retina, to your visual cortex, to your visual-spatial sketchpad... What's missing that means you don't feel 'aware' of the latter, what kind of signal were you expecting but found lacking? — Isaac
Such accusations don't bother me. If people want to model it as an homunculus, then I don't mind. I long ago came to terms with infinite regress, I couldn't progress in my field without it - it's models all the way down! — Isaac
Think about the neurons firing from your retina, to your visual cortex, to your visual-spatial sketchpad... What's missing that means you don't feel 'aware' of the latter, what kind of signal were you expecting but found lacking? — Isaac
Well can I turn that around and ask how you think we're conscious of the building of these models? — Kenosha Kid
I'm not aware of signals building up this picture. — Kenosha Kid
We're not logging raw sensory input, it's processed in some way. I don't have a strong idea of when logging starts,I guess. — Kenosha Kid
I think we can justifiably use therm 'image' to describe what exits the visual cortex. We're already not a million miles away from being able to directly decode the neural signal leaving that area into an actual computer image. — Isaac
That's it. Now walk into a room you're familiar with a see if you have the same awareness of the wardrobe, the bed, the view out the window... I can guarantee you didn't actually receive any genuine photon-signals from most of that stuff, but you felt aware of it, no? — Isaac
Taking it one step further, even without any previous experience to go on (of this actual laptop) I can infer the presence of a fan which I can 'place' in my model of what's behind these keys, just like I infer neuronal activity from my knowledge of how the brain works. — Isaac
There's absolutely no physiological reason why you shouldn't log the output of the forward acting region of your V3 area. "remember that left-right motion we saw the other day...". We just don't. — Isaac
If perception organizes, what does the brain do? — Mww
Try actually reading Metzinger. — 180 Proof
What on Earth does he mean by "self" anyway? Is he saying that there are no such things as individual organisms? If there are individual organisms that make up a particular species, then does a self exist even if those organisms don't have the mental capacity to model states of their body? The theory of evolution by natural selection is based on the idea of competing individuals (selves) with the winner successfully passing their genes down the subsequent generations, thereby improving the specie's chances of persisting through time. Ideas are just as real as physiological traits and they both are used to compete, and selected for or against, in the game of survival."According to Thomas Metzinger, no such things as selves exist in the world: nobody ever had or was a self. All that exists are phenomenal selves, as they appear in conscious experience."
How on earth is this supposed to suggest that there's no qualia? Qualia is conscious experience. — frank
There's absolutely no physiological reason why you shouldn't log the output of the forward acting region of your V3 area. "remember that left-right motion we saw the other day...". We just don't. — Isaac
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