People who are born are guaranteed to suffer but being born doesn't cause suffering. There's an important moral difference here and the analogy breaks down because of it. — Benkei
the second are not caused by because it's not a sufficient condition without proximate causes — Benkei
The fact that all living things suffer at some point in time, is not a valid argument to conclude that living is a sufficient condition for suffering so this does not resolve the causal chain. — Benkei
You seem to graps the concept of doing something because it's better without an obligation as well. So that explains the difference between a moral act and a moral obligation, doesn't it? — Benkei
I see helping others with problems you didn't cause the same way I see charity. Good but optional. — khaled
Right. So one is better but there's no obligation. Not that hard was it? — Benkei
the second are not caused by because it's not a sufficient condition without proximate causes. — Benkei
Right. So one is better but there's no obligation. Not that hard was it? — Benkei
I think not saving a person who's drowning would make you a bad person and therefore you should do it, not because you owe him but because it's the right thing to do. — Benkei
Should you stuff your face with cake everyday because you can? Or is it better to refrain from doing so? Is there an obligation to refrain? — Benkei
There is no moral property to be found — Benkei
Because I think people should make an effort to search for answers themselves. — Benkei
Because there's a difference between a moral act and a moral obligation. — Benkei
It also lends itself to a moral philosophy which is fundamentally based around what you should not do, where positive moral duties are exceptions that arise if you have in some sense an outstanding debt. — Echarmion
I think not saving a person who's drowning would make you a bad person and therefore you should do it, not because you owe him but because it's the right thing to do. While it's laudable to give to charity or to help others through volunteer work and you'd be a better person for it, it doesn't follow that if you don't you'd be a bad person. — Benkei
You would help them but don't think you should. — Benkei
I still think that's a transactional interpretation of morality though. — Benkei
am not sure how to understand "owing someone" as a basis to accept a moral duty. I have moral duties because I want to be a type of person. They're self-imposed most of the time. — Benkei
That's something I noticed in khaled's reasons not to help someone too. — Benkei
I should safe them. I doubt anyone would deny this moral duty. — Benkei
Similarly, I might have to harm someone to protect either them or others from something worse. Harming a criminal in the act is perfectly fine. Jabbing a vaccine needle in a child is morally right. — Benkei
I'd say, it depends. Have you played The Last of Us? — Benkei
In your example, if the person decides not to have a child, this may have unintended consequences more harmful to existing people and to future children than if the person had decided to have the child. — leo
Clearly she'd had a conscious experience of drinking Maxwell House coffee from a red cup. It's private, in the sense that it happened... to her. It's ineffable... to and from her limited point of view. It's immediately or directly apprehensible to her. It's meaningful to her. She has no language. Clearly meaningful conscious experience is prior to language. That which is prior to language cannot be existentially dependent upon it. My cat's conscious experience of coffee drinking is prior to language. Some conscious experience of coffee drinking exists in it's entirety prior to language. That's pretheoretical.
The problem...
There's no red quale as a property of her experience. There's also no reason to deny the same limitations apply to human conscious experience of drinking Maxwell House coffee from a red cup prior to language acquisition. The cat drinks from a red cup without ever perceiving the red cup as such. That's because there has been no correlations drawn between the cup's color and something else. Some conscious experience involving red cups do not have the property/quale of red, despite the fact that a red cup is an irrevocable necessary elemental constituent thereof. — creativesoul
the whole argument that life results in suffering and that this means that it would be better to have not been born at all is a bad argument — Jack Cummins
But you can't calculate that expected value. — leo
it is possible that you do something apparently innocent, which eventually ends up causing enormous harm in the world. — leo
It's possible that the act of killing yourself would cause less harm. But you can't put a probability on that either. — leo
So in the face of the unknown what do you do? You do your best. And that's how natalists see it too. They are faced with the unknown. But they do their best. — leo
Your very existence risks hurting people, yet you're taking that risk all the time — leo
An antinatalist risks hurting a child he adopts. — leo
It tends to make sweeping emotional appeals about suffering — Jack Cummins
and choosing adoption in preference to procreation. — Jack Cummins
that any possible persons, who will suffer more than is outweighed by the good they will experience, outnumber people who will suffer less than is outweighed by the good they will experience. — Benkei
Then for the anti-natalist to continue to have a point it must be the case that there are currently more unhappy persons than happy persons — Benkei
And if they would be born into a situation of abject poverty, where the good does not outweigh their suffering or because of a biological defect that cannot be treated, we understand that "poverty" or that "defect" would cause unacceptable suffering and we should not have a child under those circumstances. — Benkei
If living causes suffering we should be killing everything on the planet and murder would be a just act. — Benkei
If living entails suffering (e.g. philosophical pessimism) then living doesn't cause suffering — Benkei
Saying such a world is better than this one is meaningless. — Benkei
Actually it varies from an itch to a burning; and I don't care what the doctor does or does not imagine. An unimaginative doctor might be just as effective.
You still think of the meaning of talk of pain in terms of pain having a referent. This is why you can't make sense of your opponents. — Banno
That we cannot say everything does not imply that we cannot say anything. — Banno
How do you know you feel angry? — Isaac
You know you want to punch something, you know your heart is racing, you know you're inclined to growl, your speech has got louder, you're thinking less rationally... — Isaac
what is it you're committing to the existence of? — Isaac
Either way, we consider his knowledge of physiology to trump our gut feeling about the cause. — Isaac
"I'm in pain, I feel like there's something stabbing inside my thigh and it's shooting down my leg" — Isaac
"What's actually happening is that you have some tissue damage in your back" — Isaac
That is not denying the end result. It's explaining how it came to be. — Isaac
That's an explanation. It doesn't deny anything except your arbitry armchair guesswork as to how your mind works (which I'm not going to apologise for denying). — Isaac
So neuroscience says there is not an identifiable neural correlate for anger - we've looked really hard and can't find one. You've two choices 1) insist that because it feels like there must be one to you then that's the case and neuroscience just isn't trying hard enough, or 2) accept that something feeling like it's the case is not necessarily proof that it is, in fact, the case and work out how those feelings might have come about.
As I said to Khaled, if you're of the former persuasion, there's no point in us talking (there's no point in talking to anyone). If you're just going to assume that the way things seem to you to be is the way they actually are regardless of any evidence to the contrary, then there's no point in seeking other views is there? — Isaac
Khaled's picture of what is going on prevents him form seeing the obvious falsehood. We have a person who says things such as "being scared is the experience you have on a horror ride" and "I am unable to feel scared because I have urbach-wiethe disease", but Khaled is obligated by his mistaken picture of mind to say that this person does not know of what they speak. — Banno
What is preventing someone with urbach-wiethe disease (passing over the complications in simply correlating the condition with a lack of ability to feel fear) from saying "being scared is the experience you have on a horror ride" — Isaac
If being scared is the experience you have on a horror ride, then someone correctly identifying it as such has understood what fear is, haven't they? I don't see the contradiction. — Isaac
You can be unable to report on working memory and still have experiences.
— khaled
How could you possibly know that? — Isaac
That's what being scared is, not what it's like. — Isaac
It's not the mental state, it's the inability to report on working memory, which you'd just said was what 'experiences' are. Rocks don't have a working memory. — Isaac
This assumes consciousness is very tightly bound the the type of substrate. I'm not even sure I'd go that far. — Isaac
If I ask "what was being scared like?", I expect you to shake your head and walk away, what could I possibly mean by that? — Isaac
There's a fundamental disconnect between the external world (if you believe in such a thing) and your experiences which makes talk of the experience of red - where 'red' is considered to be something in the external world) fundamentally wrong. — Isaac
There's a fundamental disconnect between the external world (if you believe in such a thing) and your experiences — Isaac
Because if conscious experience is just reaching for some word (or other response) from some internal mental state, then rocks can't do it and we've given an entirely complete physical account of it. — Isaac
What part of the definition of conscious requires that is takes place in a network similar to humans? — Isaac
That requires that when you say it seems like X you're right - ie it could not be the alternatives Y and Z. — Isaac
I thought you might have, you know, read some actual research before just randomly deciding how the cognitive development of language works — Isaac
We're both guessing how it felt from evidence - mine neurological (statistical likelihoods), your is inferential (traces of working memory re-firing of neurons). Neither have good access, neither have private access. — Isaac
Yes I can, if I've got good evidence that that's what's happening. Why would I not? — Isaac
Actually, you made a more accurate measurement which was then changed to — khaled
p-zombies are impossible — Isaac
panpsychism is wrong, and physicalism is fine — Isaac
If it is then AI is definitely conscious because it can reach fr the word 'red' in response to some state of it's neural network. — Isaac
If I was a good enough story-teller, I could tell you something that effected your physiology - your 'blood would run cold' or maybe you would become angry and your adrenaline would kick in. That is 'mind over matter' on a very small scale, but the principle applies in all kinds of ways. — Wayfarer
Neurology is a discipline that tells us much about how conscious experience happens. — creativesoul
Newtonian mechanics doesn't care about why its components exist, it is a study of how they interact. Same with phenomenology
Name these components of which all conscious experience consists. — creativesoul
It tells us nothing except that each and every experience is unique, and that no report regardless of first or third person perspective can be complete. — creativesoul
What evidence do you have that that's what you did? You learnt to use 'red' at, what, two, three? Are you suggesting you have a clear memory of the method you used? — Isaac
You didn't say 'the world seems like something'. You said ''...seems like X". I'm saying, for example, that the evidence from cognitive science suggests that it cannot have seemed like X. It must have seemed like Y, or Z. You're simply reporting, post hoc, that it seemed like X because of your cultural models which encourage you to talk about experiences in this way. — Isaac
I'm trying to argue that they are not as you, seconds later, think they were. — Isaac
They don't work the same way, the inaccuracies are built in to the mechanism, it happens instantly, as a result of hippocampus function, not long term as a result of action potential changes. — Isaac
Conscious experience is invoked in AI, physicalism, the limits of knowledge... — Isaac
At no point do I have a 'feeling of a colour' which I then select the name for from some internal pantone chart. — Isaac
If instead you want to say "the experience I just had is called 'redness'", then I don't know how you'd ever come to learn the word. — Isaac
The way things seem to you (as such a fact is available to form part of any philosophical investigation) is not an unarguable fact. — Isaac
when trying to report this last step (qualia) we give inaccurate reports. I think everyone here already knew that. — khaled
then no-one can claim to be having an experience of redness with any more authority than I can claim you're not. You are no more accurate a reporter of the way an event actually felt than I am. — Isaac
I really can't see why people are finding it so hard to tell the difference between "we don't have experiences" and "we don't have experiences of colours". — Isaac
'Experience' is no less slippery a term unless pinned down. Equivocation is the weapon of choice for most woo-merchants. — Isaac
Agreed, to a certain level of accuracy. — Isaac
And, as we've just established, you telling me you do has no validity because we've all just agreed that you cannot give an accurate account of you experiences. — Isaac
We were talking about experiences - whole events. You don't experience red. — Isaac
What new information is being learned? — Isaac
Claiming to have "an experience of redness" puts 'redness' as the cause of your experience. — Isaac
Now contract the timescale. Even in the milliseconds between the conscious awareness of some state and the formation of a report of that state (especially a linguistic one), that report has already become inaccurate. — Isaac
Even if we put it later it's problematic. We could get around the first problem by positing hidden state> model>qualia (of model). Here we run into the problem I outline to Khaled above (the timescale issue). — Isaac
Experiences are caused by brains. — Isaac
Again, no-one's denying that we have something we could call experiences. — Isaac
what they are experiences of — Isaac
how private they are — Isaac
the degree to which they're in flux — Isaac
To claim that phenomenology is the 'study' of structures of consciousness as experienced from the first-person point of view, rather than merely the report of them you'd need to be able to learn something new from it. But if you can't possibly be wrong about what the structures of consciousness are from this perspective (they are exactly how they seem to you to be), then how is it a 'study' and not a mere 'report'? — Isaac
Phenomenology is a philosophical position that aims to explain conscious experience. It is an explanation. — creativesoul
I mean, I certainly can — creativesoul
By the way, you're committing an equivocation fallacy with the word qualia. — creativesoul
Conscious experience of red cups is what was in need of explanation... not an explanation of an explanation. — creativesoul
Ah, so you're another one for whom 'why?' apparently means something completely different with regards to consciousness than it does in every other field of inquiry. — Isaac
What use is just saying that the way things seem to you right now is completely impervious to any evidence to the contrary? — Isaac
None of which demonstrates that it does so directly (ie, that you are experiencing the stimuli and not your culturally-embedded response to the stimuli). — Isaac
Yes. That the brain creates models to predict the outcome of the body's interaction with hidden states of the exterior environment. That these models are heavily socially mediated (factors like language and culture). — Isaac