Yes, but any p-zombie or human would say that. It's not a question that distinguishes the two cases. I've been taught that 'hurt' and 'feel bad' are appropriate ways to express the state of my information processor when it detects signals originating from nociceptors. Most self-driving cars don't have these, so in that sense, the car is a poor example.Does pain hurt? Does it feel bad? — RogueAI
OK, 'belief' is one of those things reserved. It is not appropriate to say that a self-driving car believes that steering onto the soft shoulder at speed would be a poor choice. Different language must be used.1. “I consider myself to be a p-zombie” is false because you are a p-zombie and so don’t believe anything. — Michael
OK, so it's false, only because the actual p-zombie is not allowed to use the phrasing. The p-zombie differs on that ruling.The statement “I consider myself to be a p-zombie” is only true if you are not a p-zombie and so no rational person can believe themselves to be a p-zombie.
Belief in it is critical to the argument. The p-zombie apparently isn't allowed to 'believe', so there's seemingly no position from which an actual p-zombie can argue his case.It is a thought experiment, it is an open question whether it is believable or not. — hypericin
Yes, but any p-zombie or human would say that. — noAxioms
No, it's true by definition, regardless of what says it. The p-zombie might not feel actual pain, but says he does anyway since he very much detects the undesirable sense of injury, and he has no actual reference to what true pain feels like, so he says he feels pain, not knowing that it isn't real pain, just an interpretation of sensory data.When humans say "pain hurts" it's true. When a p-zombie says it, it's not. — RogueAI
You're definitely confusing me when y'all say there's a whole vocabulary that I'm not allowed to use, and without giving me replacement words. So I use the words.Wouldn't they just be confused about what "hurting" is?
It is truth, but 'hurts' to me is just detection of signals of injury. It's not like I lie and don't actually get this sensory input. But the extra bit, that which I would be totally unaware except for people talking about how obvious and inexplicable it is, only the talk of that makes me aware of something more that should be there.I assume you are telling the truth when you say "pain hurts"
I would hope so. They invented sex after all.Perhaps they have desires and urges we're not aware of. — RogueAI
That is, when he says "I consider myself to be a p-zombie", what he really means (to you) is "I p-consider myself to be a p-zombie". — hypericin
No, it's true by definition, regardless of what says it. The p-zombie might not feel actual pain, but says he does anyway since he very much detects the undesirable sense of injury, and he has no actual reference to what true pain feels like, so he says he feels pain, not knowing that it isn't real pain, just an interpretation of sensory data. — noAxioms
"p-consider", "p-belief" is all the informational operations of "consider", "belief" without the conscious part. Like how a computer-vision program might "believe" it is looking at a table, without any conscious awareness of it. — hypericin
They wouldn't be p-zombies if they acted differently. — Michael
"p-consider", "p-belief" is all the informational operations of "consider", "belief" without the conscious part. Like how a computer-vision program might "believe" it is looking at a table, without any conscious awareness of it. — hypericin
Exactly. Zombies by definition behave as we do, but they cannot adopt attitudes towards propositions, and so do not have beliefs.
This thread is based on a misunderstanding of the nature of philosophical zombies. — Banno
Something like "the computer algorithm inside my head has caused me to speak the phrase 'I am not a p-zombie'"? — Michael
Something inside their heads causes them to say things, just as it does for us. The only difference is the lights are out. — hypericin
The words they use mean what they mean in ordinary English. — Michael
The statement “I consider myself to be a p-zombie” is only true if you are not a p-zombie and so no rational person can believe themselves to be a p-zombie. — Michael
along with the informational p-zombie belief-analog that they are p-zombies. — hypericin
But the fact remains that they might be a p-zombie
I find it very hard to believe. But I can believe that there are differences in neural architecture such that for some people this qualia talk makes no sense. — hypericin
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