I don't really know that we are our minds. What of our bodies? Are we not our bodies? If confusion results from saying that we have access to our minds, in what way do we have access to our own bodies, and then to the environment they are part of? Does this mean that "we" can exist apart from our bodies? If not, then wouldn't that mean that we are our bodies and not our minds? — Harry Hindu
hallucinated spiders look just like real spiders. — Harry Hindu
No, that's why Flubberts differ from person to person. You can't expect them to be all equal. Why should they? Because they differ they are even more useful in constructing an invariant picture of material processes behind them. If there would be only one common set of common Flubberts one couldn't even start looking for a common materialistic picture behind them.This picture is a subset of a much wider collection of Flubberts. Different and varying Flubberts can be reduced to a stable invariant set of common Flubberts, which are the Flubberts of the material processes. — AgentTangarine
Only in abstract experimental conditions, or in abstract views on dundereekies (like reducing the moon to a point mass or colorless mass, so it look the same to all people) it's a useful concept. — AgentTangarine
I, on the other hand, experience flubberts in my brain dundereekies directly. So you might be able to infer if I have a bocketibonders model in my mind. — AgentTangarine
That's the point; the supposition that you have privileged access to flubberts; as Wittgenstein might have said, the flubberts drop out of consideration, and all we have to talk about are the dundereekies. — Banno
Hence my continuing view, that qualia lead to nonsense — Banno
A materialistic view can't even exist without them. — AgentTangarine
Did you argue for this somewhere? — Banno
And why do you imply that my views are materialist? What gave you that impression?
6m — Banno
No need to argue for it. — AgentTangarine
Neither Dennett nor I have argued that there is no need to talk about experiences; rather that replacing talk of experiences with talk of qualia is unhelpful.
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 — Banno
Oh, one more question... — bongo fury
What question?
You habitually fail to make your point, — Banno
I'm mystified how "qualia" is any more lazy or obfuscating than "consciousness" or "subjective experience"; and why Dennett and Banno continually want to let the others off the hook. — bongo fury
I've explicitly argued that both consciousness and subjectivity are overused by philosophers. — Banno
some seem to relate to the idea easily and the concept seems to make more sense to some than others. I am inclined to think that the idea of qualia is useful to some extent, — Jack Cummins
Sure, but the question was why do hallucinated spiders look like real spiders. How do you explain the behavior of someone hallucinating without "silly" qualia? How is it that something that isn't real looks like something that is unless they both take the same form (qualia)?Of course; but they are not real spiders. An odd thing about denying realism is that it leads to the conclusion that there are no real spiders, and hence it's all hallucinations; we no longer have the capacity to say that the paranoiac is wrong. — Banno
I'm working on what is involved in the intentionalist approach. It fits with Wittgenstein via Anscombe, and seems compatible with your comments about neuroscience, but there are some issues I'd like to clear up before committing to something like it. — Banno
The "perception" dispute is not like that. It's instead a disagreement over how the term is defined. — Andrew M
Because the "veil of perception" model takes the ordinary term "image" (or "veil", or "representation") which is defined in terms of perceptible objects and then defines "perception" in terms of images (or veils or representations), which is circular. Also see the example below. — Andrew M
That is, this red flower here is the intended object of my perception. — Andrew M
If I'm mistaken about what is there (because, like the above instrument's operation, things can sometimes go awry) then I haven't perceived anything. — Andrew M
Is this the internal subjective qualia? — Jack Cummins
It is probably simply that the term gives a specific framework for thinking about perception. — Jack Cummins
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