Which one? The one you experienced with the red post box, or the one from the red wine, or the red rose, or the red car...which of them is the 'red' one? — Isaac
I think the main difference is that I can show you an apple, but I can't show you my experience. I can show you my expression of pain, but not the pain itself.
— Luke
First, I think you can show me the experience. If you prick your finger with a pin, you can show me the experience by pricking me with a pin. — Jamal
Are the experiences the same? Well, there’s no numerical identity, but there’s some level of qualitative identity. — Jamal
There can’t be total qualitative identity because that would be equivalent to numerical identity, and that would require that I experience the pinprick as you, which is just to be you. I don’t think it’s right to describe this as ineffability. — Jamal
I see this kind of how I see perception. Some around here will say that perception is deficient or distorted because we perceive in a particular way which is determined or conditioned by our anatomy and physiology and our behaviour in our environment. This view presumes that perfect, undistorted perception would be a view from nowhere or, in Kant’s terms, an intellectual intuition. This is a bad account of perception. — Jamal
It's ineffable.No one can describe such an experience, no-one can pin down such an experience — Isaac
You must possess a preternatural understanding of what the brain can and can't do.there's no mechanism in the brain which could account for it, there's no cortex in the brain which could process it — Isaac
No tests and all the tests fail, things are looking grim for team experience.there are no tests for it... and every test that's ever been done to try and identify such a thing has failed utterly. — Isaac
Don't believe your lying eyes.There's absolutely no evidence for it. — Isaac
No "the", these are all "red experiences". Is this going somewhere?Which one? The one you experienced with the red post box, or the one from the red wine, or the red rose, or the red car...which of them is the 'red' one? — Isaac
That's language. You were denying the role of language. I was asking how this 'generalization' was carried out absent of language or socialisation. — Isaac
of course language is involved in conceptualizing and talking about the colours seen, including the kinds of gross generalizations involved in such things as referring to all those differently coloured objects as "red". — Janus
Do you deny that animals can recognize different colours although they have no language? — Janus
So 'red' is a social construct.
From where do we learn that the wine and the post box are of similar enough colour for the experience they produce to be the same 'red experience'? Language. Culture. — Isaac
When I was a small child I learned to associate this sensation with "color", and this variety of color sensation with "red". — hypericin
Which sensation? — Isaac
Redness, the visual sensation I experience when an object or light source designated "red" enters my visual field . — hypericin
From where do we learn that the wine and the post box are of similar enough colour for the experience they produce to be the same 'red experience'? Language. Culture. — Isaac
Yes, in the main. I would deny the claim that animals have no language, but I doubt any are sophisticated enough to delineate colour terms. — Isaac
You could set up an experiment to show that, for example, dogs, might respond differently to different coloured cards where a green card meant getting fed and a blue card meant being let out for some exercise, and where the cards were tonally identical, which would rule our their responding to different shades of grey, (I remember reading that dogs can see certain colours, but I can't remember which ones, so my suggested experiment is just an example). — Janus
Now you're saying there's no 'the'. So which sensation did you learn to associate with the word red as a child? — Isaac
I didn't say I can't show you "the" experience. I said I can't show you "my" experience. — Luke
How do you know that "there's some level of qualitative identity"? Can that ever be anything more than an assumption? — Luke
I have not described this as ineffability. I have said that language may not be able to communicate one person's experience such that another can "fully" understand their experience only from the language. — Luke
I don't presume or have any sympathy for an undistorted view from nowhere. — Luke
If you're claiming we don't have experiences of red and pain, you're making a strong claim and you'll need a strong argument for it.
— frank
It's a 'strong' claim because you said so?
Hers' my 'strong' argument for it. There's absolutely no evidence for it. No one can describe such an experience, no-one can pin down such an experience, there are no tests for it, there's no mechanism in the brain which could account for it, there's no cortex in the brain which could process it, and every test that's ever been done to try and identify such a thing has failed utterly. — Isaac
How long is a thread about what cannot be said? — Banno
This ineffable thread surely is effing along nicely — Heracloitus
There is not one single red sensation, it is a family. I learned to associate a spectrum of color sensations corresponding to a spectrum of light centered around 700nm or so as "red". — hypericin
Are you prepared to say that a human being who had been raised without learning language would have no experiences? — Janus
Yes, but as far as showing me your experience has any meaning at all, it means just the same as showing me the experience, which is why I put it that way and why I made the point. — Jamal
There is little that is more certain than that we share lots of things, so I wouldn't want to characterize it as merely an assumption. (Obviously though, I could have lost the feeling in my finger, so we're not always right). — Jamal
My point was that this is tantamount to saying what I said. — Jamal
But this is going around in circles and I don't think you're reading me charitably, even though I'm being pretty clear. — Jamal
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