Thanks for posting those papers — jorndoe
Didn't see the image you posted; is that from a different paper? — jorndoe
I guess they don't address the Levine / Chalmers thing directly, yet the models give their own insights. — jorndoe
Strictly speaking, you know what you inferred. Inference is not extra-sensory perception. — Tate
* In fact I distinctly remember reading a paper on that very subject, but I don't seem to have it in my biblio database. I might do a Google trawl for it later. — Isaac
What are the internal states of the niche? And what are the causal regularities that they model? We suggest that internal states of the niche are a subset of the physical states of the material environment. Namely, the internal states of the niche are the physical states of the environment, which have been modified by the dense histories of different organisms interacting in their shared niche (i.e., histories of active inference).
The point was, that you haven't the premises required to logically conclude that there is no reason for the behaviour of neurons. — Metaphysician Undercover
Systems theory is extremely flimsy. — Metaphysician Undercover
What about those "hidden states"? Those unknown aspects disqualify this conclusion. — Metaphysician Undercover
if a (psychological) "theory" predicts both a behavior and its contradictory, it ain't a scientific theory now is it (unfalsifiable) — Agent Smith
Take two people A & B. Inform A on comfirmation bias aka cherry-picking and keep the other, B, in the dark about this bias. Ask both to analyze their beliefs. There should be a noticeable difference betwixt the two in my humble opinion — Agent Smith
Everybody knows about clickbait. So they become somewhat immune and it has to change. — unenlightened
every experiment involves deception - as soon as the subject knows what aspect of behaviour is being investigated, their behaviour is influenced by that knowledge. — unenlightened
a huge part of all social behaviour in humans is dependent on what one thinks of humans - one's folk psychology, and folk psychology is influence by so-called scientific psychology. — unenlightened
Physicists do not have this problem as atoms do not have a folk atomic theory, that influences their interactions. — unenlightened
Pre-publication: Bad methodology.
Post-publication: People altering their behavior (now they know).
Either way, disastrous for psychology, oui? — Agent Smith
The theories of Freud have totally transformed public attitudes and behaviour regarding sex — unenlightened
Replication crisis in psychology? — Agent Smith
The general public read trashy women's magazines and watch tv, which are full of the latest freshly out of date psychology theory concerning losing weight, self improvement of all kinds,, and whatever the latest therapy of the stars is. — unenlightened
they are also moulded by clickbait which is designed by psychologists - one doesn't have to understand to be influenced. — unenlightened
They don't read astronomy papers either, but they know space is big and think they have been abducted by aliens in space ships. That's a new phenomenon of human behaviour. — unenlightened
as we gain knowledge of our how our brains work, we will also be able to avoid the pitfalls we discover along the way. — Agent Smith
I have an image of cognition occurring somewhere between one's body and those things that the body manipulates - embedded or extended cognition. To this we now add enactive cognition, that it is in our manipulation of things that cognition occurs. I'm puzzling over the extent to which the mathematics here assists in that choice, and I'm supposing for the moment that it is neutral. — Banno
Read up on cognitive biases, the modern version of fallacies, and get back to me. — Agent Smith
I'm not expecting the transformation and thus the falsification of a psychological theory overnight - it'll be gradual, depending on what you alluded to which is how fast the information is disseminated to the people, but falsification is inevitable. — Agent Smith
I suspect every theory in the humanities is inclined to become either self-fulfilling or self-refuting as soon as it becomes public, but I wouldn't care to say which kind this one is. — unenlightened
Any theory in psychology that explains (human behavior) will also have to predict (human behavior). Yet, once we're in the know about such a theory, we can alter our conduct, thus falsifying the theory. — Agent Smith
So, it's a big black mark against procreative acts that they create a great injustice. — Bartricks
They seem, if we focus on the person who is created by them, to be big moral loss makers. — Bartricks
remember, the benefits the procreative act confers on the person who is created can't be counted among them — Bartricks
So, once more, if you rack up $1m of debt to make $500 grand, you're a shite business person. And if you think the $500 grand is profit, you're an idiot. It's not profit. You're down 500grand. You made 500 grand - but you made it at $1m cost. — Bartricks
we cannot determine whether the neurons act representatively, through reference to the model, because the model represents how the thing behaves, not the reason (why) for that behaviour. — Metaphysician Undercover
The person deserves more benefit than they recieve. More. The shortfall represents an injustice. — Bartricks
This is indeed all valid and sound. It soundly proves that there is a negative aspect to procreation, that it creates a situation in which there will be undeserved harm which is a bad thing. — Isaac
why think science fares any better? — Marchesk
Should I doubt that narrative? — Marchesk

If there is a "hidden state" that causes each of us to see the cup, then that hidden state is part of our shared world. We might give it a name. I suggest we call the hidden state that causes us to see the cup, a cup. — Banno
I don't think that they were trying to be selfish. The argument was that if one didn't procreate, it wouldn't result in the existence of a person who would deserve benefits but be unable to get them. — DA671
color and shape are part of the visual experience. The difficulty of squaring that with the correlating brain function is the well known hard problem. — Marchesk
I think Keith Frankish has a better approach (illusionism) — Marchesk
I do experience seeing colors and hear sounds. — Marchesk
You're mistaking the map of neuroscience with the actual territory of whatever a conscious brain is. — Marchesk
the deserved benefits they create are less than the person they create deserves and so we have an injustice overall, not justice promotion; — Bartricks
if the act is not performed there does not exist a person who is being deprived of the deserved benefits the act would otherwise have created. — Bartricks
Maybe experiences are qualia, maybe they're brain activity, maybe they're something else. — Michael
I honestly think you might be a p-zombie. — Michael
If there is no hidden blue state then him seeing something blue has nothing to do with there being some hidden blue state. — Michael
If the hidden state is "red" (as you say) but it causes person B to (wrongly) see a blue dress then the "blue" in "see a blue dress" doesn't refer to any property of the red hidden state. — Michael
the words "red" and "blue" refer to some property of their respective percepts, not to some property of hidden state X. — Michael
Therefore seeing has nothing to do with being stimulated by and responding to external stimulation (except in the trivial sense that stimulation is often what causes those of us who don't have blindsight (and who aren't blind) to see). — Michael
We see when there is a visual percept, and the features of this visual percept (e.g. colour and shape) are not properties of whatever the external cause of the sensation is. — Michael
the words "red" and "blue" refer to some property of their respective percepts, not to some property of hidden state X. — Michael
the features of that visual percept (e.g. colours and shapes) are not properties of the external stimulation but properties of that visual percept. — Michael
The only difference is that when we're awake the experience is triggered by external stimulation and when we dream the experience is triggered by "random" brain activity. — Michael
The latter kind of seeing and hearing is separate from the former kind, and the latter can happen without the former (e.g. when we dream or hallucinate). — Michael
I only comment in this thread to register my sense of outrage at what is being done by Putin. That is all — Wayfarer
my hope, and belief, also. — Wayfarer
I still think the Ukrainians will win, and resoundingly so. — Olivier5
That "response" is seeing a red dress or seeing a blue dress. — Michael
You're saying that seeing1 hidden state X causes person A to see2 a red dress and person B to see2 a blue dress. Two different sense of "seeing". — Michael
For example, units in the network could represent neurons and the connections could represent synapses, as in the human brain. — Wikipedia, Connectionism
What does it mean to see differently other than to see different things? — Michael
seeing differently is seeing different things. — Michael
So person A and person B are not seeing the same thing, therefore one (or both) of them isn't seeing the hidden state X. — Michael
So what is person B seeing and what is the blue dress? Because it isn't hidden state X. — Michael
