consciousness means subjectivity — Marchesk
It's easier to see this is not the case if we avoid the word consciousness and stick with qualia and behavior.
It's clear that when speaking of qualia we are not talking about behavior, and vice versa. A behaviorist would deny the existence of qualia, not say that qualia is actually behavior, because that makes no sense. — Marchesk
There is definitely a private, unshareable aspect to our being. — Marchesk
How is it that these three people aren't sharing their "unsharable" experience of red, when they use language to share their experiences of red? If it were "unsharable", then we shouldn't even be able to communicate it, much less have listeners understand it.If we try to compare our private unsharable experience of red, one might say, 'it reminds me of the peace and comfort of the womb, I have my bedroom painted red, because it is relaxing', and the other might say, 'I find it stimulating and exciting, I also have my bedroom painted red, but for quite different reasons', and another might not like red at all, and find it provokes anxiety and stress. — unenlightened
How is it that these three people aren't sharing their "unsharable" experience of red, when they use language to share their experiences of red? If it were "unsharable", then we shouldn't even be able to communicate it, much less have listeners understand it. — Harry Hindu
But strip away all the associations and responses that we clearly can talk about because we just did, and there seems to me at least, to be nothing left that is the quale itself. The box turns out not to have much of a beetle after all. — unenlightened
We share the particularity of our different associations and responses to red, but we fail to quite touch the beetle in the box, because the beetle has been defined to be the purified essence of privacy. We have talked of individuality, of subjectivity, in relation to our response to red, but you want to say that this is not the experience of red: the quale always escapes - by definition. But if you strip out every association, every response, is there in fact anything left, some other, unsharable secret? — unenlightened
Wittgenstein had a lifelong obsession with solipsism that appears never to have left him before his death. There's some speculation that his worries over privacy, the nonexistence of subjects, and the linguistic inefficacy of private experiences were a result of his poor theory of mind, since he was likely somewhere on the autism spectrum. Early on he even tried to dissolve reference to psychological subjects in belief reports. — The Great Whatever
I think Wittgenstein was wrong about the beetle in the box. We can somewhat share our subjective experiences because we have them in common by virtue of being human. — Marchesk
But what does a behaviorist mean when when they say that dropping a rock on your toe "hurts"? If they mean you hop up and down and yell, then that's not consciousness. That's simply behavior. It they mean certain nerves are firing resulting in that behavior, it is again not consciousness, it's neurological activity. — Marchesk
It's a problem isn't it? One has to say that they are sharing associations, responses (behaviours) but not the quale. Because that is what the quale is supposed to consist of - the unsharable aspect of experience. But strip away all the associations and responses that we clearly can talk about because we just did, and there seems to me at least, to be nothing left that is the quale itself. The box turns out not to have much of a beetle after all. — unenlightened
The difference indicates privacy. — Mongrel
But how can we share quale without becoming the person themselves? That would be like asking what it is like for that apple to have the same colors, shape, texture, aroma, taste and position in space-time that this apple has. If that were the case, it would be the same apple.It's a problem isn't it? One has to say that they are sharing associations, responses (behaviours) but not the quale. Because that is what the quale is supposed to consist of - the unsharable aspect of experience. But strip away all the associations and responses that we clearly can talk about because we just did, and there seems to me at least, to be nothing left that is the quale itself. The box turns out not to have much of a beetle after all. — unenlightened
I can't share the experience of seeing blue with a congenitally blind man, but I can convince him that there's something I can't share. — Mongrel
Indeed. 'I think, therefore I am you.'
The argument is not against difference, but against privacy. — unenlightened
Why would we want to share our quale anyway? What would be the point? What new knowledge would we acquire that we can't already acquire via our own observations, or via language? If I told you I see a blue sky, why would you need to experience my quale? What new knowledge you you gain that you wouldn't have by looking at me looking at the sky, or by hearing my words? — Harry Hindu
I have not the least idea. — unenlightened
Effects carry information about their causes. — Harry Hindu
Do you think information has an objective, mind-independent existence?
I have my doubts. I think maybe the mind creates information about the world. The world exists as it is, but we derive information about it as we interact with the world. — Marchesk
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