Do you have a citation I could look into? — Isaac
I mean I know what qualia are. — fdrake
I’m not sure what you’re saying here, but my claim is that — plausible or not, convincing or not — the following is not simply incomprehensible — Srap Tasmaner
In taking exception to your rendering, it is not incumbent on me to supply an alternative — Mww
....is found the necessary causality not given in the first, re: certain properties. — Mww
....is found that those conditions sustaining epistemological monism are apparently false, insofar as herein it is said there is nothing of those given properties of that object found in the brain. — Mww
First......What do you tell the boss? — Mww
it's that sense data as a concept itself stakes out a claim regarding the process that couples mind and world — fdrake
Using sense data as you've been doing contributes to the mess. — fdrake
It seems to me that you think in sufficient accord with sense data theories that you're happy treating the concept as transportable between perceptual theories — fdrake
Ah, yes, another tabula raza know-nothing. Lazy is as lazy does, Harry. You prove my point. :yawn:I come here to discuss with fellow free-thinkers that can think for themselves and come to their own conclusions, and not only about what other people write. — Harry Hindu
It's much clearer to have a healthy divorce between concepts (sense-data, qualia, cosmological constants) and theories. — Kenosha Kid
We don't know what causes it. Presently, there is no testable theory of it. Neither MP nor Dennett offer one. — frank
Isn’t a concept a mini-theory( fact-value distinction and all)? — Joshs
A really homogeneous area offering nothing to be cannot be given to any perception.
If I can differentiate the colours of the walls when all else is equal, that's a legitimate use case for the word 'qualia'. — Kenosha Kid
That doesn't mean that one whiskey tastes the same as another, that your first whiskey tastes the same as your second, that whiskey tastes the same to you now as it did when you started drinking it aged 11, or that it tastes the same irrespective of whether you brushed your teeth. — Kenosha Kid
But it's also interesting that bathtub gin + iodine + hair tonic tastes a bit like scotch, and we'll talk about this concoction, itself, tasting like scotch. — Srap Tasmaner
When we say, "It does taste a bit like scotch," we take ourselves to be talking about that thing, and we're not simply and obviously wrong to do so. — Srap Tasmaner
I'm just saying there's no 1-to-1 map. Our perceptions aren't functions of objects from which we can prove the existence of those objects. — Kenosha Kid
That's fair. Even objects are mini-theories :smile: — Kenosha Kid
Your feeling that any such concept brings with it the trace of its theoretical origins and connotations is what I'm arguing against. Things first, theories second.
Taking an analogy with cosmology, it would scupper useful discussion to hold that the concept of the cosmological constant brings with it the assumption of a steady-state universe _because that's what Einstein intended_. It's much clearer to have a healthy divorce between concepts (sense-data, qualia, cosmological constants) and theories. The confusion arises from hauling in the theory uninvited, not: — Kenosha Kid
Our perceptions aren't functions of objects from which we can prove the existence of those objects. — Kenosha Kid
This makes me very confused. Objects are mini theories, but don't worry about the theories using those objects imports to discourse? — fdrake
A 1-to-1 relationship exists between cone cells and the sensing of specific colors, a 1-to-1 relationship between the perception of a specific color and its neural correlate in the visual cortex, so why not a 1-to-1 relationship between subjectivity of the color itself and properties of some class of molecules or molecular array in the brain? — Enrique
different people see the same objects in different ways. — Kenosha Kid
That's why when Dennett tries to explain consciousness, it sounds like he's explaining it away, while wishing to keep the term instead of just embracing eliminativism. When Dennett says of course he's not denying consciousness, he means the functional definition of it, and not conscious sensation. — Marchesk
I take Dennett to be saying that of course we experience sensations, see colours, and feel all kinds of emotions; of course we can be conscious of our experiences, but that the naive thought that feelings, sensation consciousness are not physical is based on our "folk" intuitive presuppositions concerning what it means to be physical, which leads us to posit an incoherent idea of mental substance. — Janus
Yes! That bit doesn't confuse me. The bit which confuses me is that objects are mini theories but don't worry about the theoretical import of the object when using it. — fdrake
different people see the same objects in different ways.
— Kenosha Kid
And I don't see how you can say that with a straight face. — Srap Tasmaner
Consider how Dennett talks about qualia, philosophers’ term for subjective experiences. My qualia at this moment are the smell of coffee, the sound of a truck rumbling by on the street, my puzzlement over Dennett’s ideas. Dennett notes that we often overrate the objective accuracy and causal power of our qualia. True enough.
But he concludes, bizarrely, that therefore qualia are fictions, “an artifact of bad theorizing.” If we lack qualia, then we are zombies, creatures that look and even behave like humans but have no inner, subjective life. Imagining a reader who insists he is not a zombie, Dennett writes:
“The only support for that conviction [that you are not a zombie] is the vehemence of the conviction itself, and as soon as you allow the theoretical possibility that there could be zombies, you have to give up your papal authority about your own nonzombiehood.” — John Horgan
How can it be right to say the external world is an hypothesis, when we all experience a world external to our bodies — Janus
I'm intrigued to hear how you think we do that. Because from where I'm sitting, nothing of the external world is, for instance, in my brain. Cut me open (please don't) and there's no aforementioned flower in there being experienced.
If you're thinking some kind of perfect divine insight, okay that's your belief system and I'm not going to try and talk you out of it, likewise for some exotic everything-is-one-consciousness-type belief. — Kenosha Kid
It's not the molecules in the brain. When we drink the fake whiskey, a sample isn't sent up to the brain for analysis, rather signals about the sample are sent up. We can test this for ourselves. Water tastes much better when we're thirsty, meatloaf when we're hungry, etc. Objects appear the same throughout the day despite the ambient light changing. And different people see the same objects in different ways. — Kenosha Kid
We see different things. — Tom Storm
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