X is the set of experiences that are similar enough to be called "red" by me. Y is the set of experiences that are similar enough to be called "red" by you. When I say "You had X" (or Y) I mean you had an experience that belongs to that set. Better? — khaled
No, it's not because that neurological process would not occur if I didn't want to rake the leaves. — Janus
Put simply it is understood to consist in a transfer of energy. Something applies a force to something else causing it to it change in some way; it's that simple. — Janus
To put science above ordinary human understanding is scientism; a baseless diminishment of the human. It's just another unwarranted ideological dogma we don't need. — Janus
I doubt we'll agree that scientific theories constitute any reason to reject our ordinary understandings of human freedom and responsibility. To say they do is nothing more than an act of faith; — Janus
As for your keypad, the code opens the door because it is programmed to do so, and is able to do so through mechanical forces and means. It certainly doesn’t open the door because 654 is more powerful than 456. — NOS4A2
then your example of reaction YYY is absolutely impossible. Everyone's structure is going to be ABC, or DEF, or GHI because no-one is going to respond in the exact same way to three separate instances of anything. — Isaac
Sure but I was simplifying by only talking about color. — khaled
The difference between AAB and GGR, constricting it only to color, could be the difference in toe shape of the participants for all we know. Even narrowing it down to color, we have no evidence that the difference is in the V4 region. — khaled
That's not a property of the feelings. — Isaac
Then what is it a property of? — Luke
You. The things you possess are a property of you (and the law of the country you live in, when it comes to stuff not part of your body). The feeling 'pain' doesn't have the property {belongs to Luke}. How could it? — Isaac
We haven't "shared" the feeling in that we both partake of the same feeling. I have my feeling and you have yours, even when they occur at roughly the same place and time. — Luke
The ‘how’ of finding oneself in the world that enactivists talk about depends on their viewing a cognitive-environmental system as normative in character, that is, as functioning as an autonomous whole in a certain reciprocal causal exchange with its world. — Joshs
autonomy for the enactivist isnt the property of a brain box hidden behind a markov blanket, distinguishable not only from the world but from its own body, but the autonomy of a brain-body system, whose elements cannot be separated out and for whom interaction with a world is direct rather than. indirect. — Joshs
An autonomous system produces and sustains its own identity in precarious conditions and thereby establishes a perspective from which interactions with the world acquire a normative status. Certain interactions facilitate autonomy and other interactions degrade it. — Joshs
As a result, they do not explain how certain processes actively generate and sustain an identity that also constitutes an intrinsically normative way of being in the world. — Joshs
That's not a property of the feelings. — Isaac
Then what is it a property of? — Luke
We haven't "shared" the feeling in that we both partake of the same feeling. I have my feeling and you have yours, even when they occur at roughly the same place and time.
Perhaps it should be clarified that what is private is having the feeling and what is shareable is expressing the feeling, and that these are not the same thing. — Luke
I hadn't realized you didn't understand the notion of efficient or mechanical causation. Put simply it is understood to consist in a transfer of energy. Something applies a force to something else causing it to it change in some way; it's that simple. — Janus
I feel the sun on my skin causing me to feel hotter, or the wind pushing me, the stone crushing my finger etc, etc: the examples are endless. Also I can do things with my body; I can lift things, smash things, start fires, etc, etc.; again the examples are endless. This experience of natural forces acting on me, and my ability to act on things is the basis of the notion of efficient causation. — Janus
They didn't go to the shop because they were determined to do so by neurological activity which is beyond their control. What possible evidence could there be for such a conclusion? — Janus
Here’s a thought experiment. Take two pieces of paper and two inkwells with a small but exact amount of ink in them. On one piece of paper, scribble gibberish and random symbols until all the ink is applied to the page. On the other, write something, maybe a letter to a loved one, a song or whatever, until all the ink is applied to the page. There should now be the same amount of paper, same amount of ink, same mass, same velocity, same potential energy, same forces acting on each. So how is the power of one different than the power of the other? — NOS4A2
Feelings are intrinsically private and unshareable only in the sense that I can't have yours and you can't have mine. — Luke
But feelings are also non-intrinsically private and shareable in the sense that they can be expressed via language, body language, or otherwise. Intersubjectivity deals only with the latter. — Luke
Because we can picture having different Xs and Ys. I can imagine having different "flavors" of experience (same structure different content). Idk why I would choose a model that suggests that that cannot be done. — khaled
I seek expression for its own sake. I also find it healthy and beneficial to hold my ideas to the grindstone of criticism and disputation. It get’s me thinking. — NOS4A2
There is undoubtedly a direct interaction between the body and the environment. But that’s where your chain ends for me. — NOS4A2
After that the events are generated by ... the human being — NOS4A2
The same with words. We seek them out, focussing on them, reading them, listening to them, speaking them, understanding them, ascribing meaning to them, becoming aroused or anxious or offended by them, venerating some and banning others. Again, in my admittedly common sense understanding, these are the activities of a human being. At each step we control what we do with these sights, sounds, or whatever form words may take in our environment. And I believe these actions are not just the immanent reactions to word themselves, but of the entire organism as it exists a long process of language development and acquisition. — NOS4A2
Basically, I believe people overestimate the power of words while underestimating their own power over words. Words are beautiful, useful, important, valuable—but they are not powerful. — NOS4A2
In normal parlance causes for actual events are generally thought in efficient, mechanical terms. — Janus
I said we should listen to people if we want to understand them, not believe everything they say. — Janus
Science is not the best way to understand human behavior in my view. If you want to understand why people do things you need to ask them — Janus
Sound and words are not the same thing. You used “sounds” in your argument and then changed it to “words” in your conclusion. Verbal sleight of hand which I’ll assume was an error and not intentional. Just fyi, enjoying following the discussion. — DingoJones
That seems to be within task, like within "eating a sandwich" — fdrake
do you think previous task information is blocked from influencing the current task? — fdrake
I get that you can partition off the regulatory signals once you've fixed a task you're describing, and it becomes somewhat post hoc, but can you partition of the regulatory signals in the agent's history from informing them what the current task is? — fdrake
Heidegger, however, believes all new experiences are bound up so directly in holistically organized pragmatic aims and significances that trying to ground Being in perception produces an artificial abstraction. Instead, he founds all experiencing on what he calls the ‘as’ structure. We see something ‘as’ something , that is, as the contextual, pragmatic way it matters to us in relation to our ongoing concerns. — Joshs
It seems to me the relevant dispute regarding perception is whether, when you functionally split off those low level things from the upper level things, do you render the account which uses that functional distinction inaccurate, since "upstream", higher in model's hierarchy, the two are actually integrated interactive processes? — fdrake
Let me suggest the way that Husserl and Merlea-Ponty would answer the question of whether there can be any such thing as a non task-relative sensation. But first, I’m wondering whether such a concept would fall under Sellars’s myth of the given. — Joshs
The point isn’t simply to question the primordiality in nature of perfect lines and surfaces but to question the very concept of a line or surface as a sensory given rather than a relative constructive hypothesis. — Joshs
Maybe intersubjectivity also requires an element of understanding rather than mere expression (or sharing). — Luke
So let's split up physical differences into two types, structural, and content-determining. — khaled
There is just as much reason to assume they are the same as to assume they are different. The model doesn't become any more or any less complex by assuming either. — khaled
We have no evidence of that. As I've shown, you can have radically different epiphenomena and still be able to do all of: — khaled
no reason to assume they're the same. — khaled
So the difference the fMRI detected is not necessarily a difference in the Xs and Ys but again, a difference in their structure. — khaled
In the relevant Wittgensteinian sense, there could be something publicly shareable, in principle, which is entirely subjective. There are such things, such as thoughts one has which are not yet shared, unexpressed pain hiding behind a stoic disposition, a poker face, and the like. — Luke
even if it becomes shared, there remains an intrinsically private aspect - how it feels to the subject. What cannot be shared is for me to have your pains and vice versa. — Luke
would say that that we have experiences is a bit more than an assumption no? It precedes the neurology even.
Epiphenomenon X does pre-exist. The experience you get when looking at red things precedes your knowledge of whatever brainstate is behind that experience. — khaled
Clark likes to build machines , and I think it would be a lot more difficult to simulate psychological processes vi an A.I. system at present without invoking computations and representations. I think if Clark were a personality theorist, psychotherapist, researcher in psychopathology or social psychologist he might look at matters differently. — Joshs
enactivist approaches like that of Matthew Ratcliffe and Varela, the emphasis is not on WHAT is taking place when one has the sort of experience Barrett
describes, but on HOW one has it, in the sense of how one is finding oneself in the world, one’s comportment toward events. — Joshs
think it is that the various forms of input into affect , the hormonal , physiological-kinesthetic, behavior and social, are so tightly integrated through reciprocal causality that the question of WHAT one is feeling ( angina vs anxiety) is usually much less pertinent than the issue of how the world as a whole is altered for us when we are anxious or sad or elated. — Joshs
Representational models just seem to me to be clunky when it comes to handling full-fledged ongoing , real-time reciprocal causality. — Joshs
But we don't know if brainstate1 causes X or Y or Z or U or G. — khaled
the experience that causes you to reach for the word "Red" (X) is precisely the experience that would cause me to reach for the word "Green". — khaled
You can do an fMRI scan on both of our brains, and you wouldn't be able to extract this piece of information. We will show very similar activity. — khaled
However this set of variables is undiscoverable. Since whether or not you have XXY or LLE makes no difference as long as structure is preserved. — khaled
we have no "outside perspective" from which we can say "Ah, yes, it seems that people with this type of nose have Ls instead of Xs when looking at blood". We have no access to whether or not we are having the same Xs and Ys or how they're related. — khaled
I don't care if you believe me or not. — NOS4A2
I have never believed nor stated that sound and light doesn’t have an effect on the body, so there is no need to pretend I did. I am merely opposing the idea that words, whether spoken or written, have a different, more powerful effect on the body than gibberish or arbitrary marks on paper. — NOS4A2
I am willing to defend this belief if you care to argue the point. — NOS4A2
I wouldn't talk in terms of "sufficient" cause but rather sufficient conditions, which are multifarious, even arguably up to everything else that exists. — Janus
If you want to understand why people do things you need to ask them — Janus
What makes you believe they're not task oriented? Or in other words - what makes the sensible default hypotheses non-task relativeness for edge recognition and contrast detection; or whatever broader category they lay in; when the rest of the procedure is task-relative? — fdrake
The type of semantic information being that perceptual features are foraged under some model of hypothetical cause; the hypothetical causal structure ascribes an explanatory space of meanings/reasons consistent with the act. EG, when someone's perceptually exploring a face, they look at the bits of the face which are most informative regarding its global structure assuming it were a face, you can see the general model of faces at work when looking at someone's scan paths over faces. As for why it maybe counts as semantic, it's like like instructional information. — fdrake
Yeah, that seems like a valid criticism. Perhaps it reflects the limits of a scientific approach. I can see the problems, but not necessarily the solutions in the lab. It may be time to let us wishy-washy psychologists loose on the subject, something more like Feldman Barrett is doing with emotion? — Isaac
I dunno how to evaluate this! — fdrake
My point wasn't to define subjectivity, only to point out that it is not identical to privacy. — Luke
The dictionary offers this relevant definition: "dependent on the mind or on an individual's perception for its existence." — Luke
I cannot experience anybody else's pain and nobody else can experience my pain. — Luke
Problem is, we have no way of quantifying the impact of brainstates on Xs and Ys. — khaled
we have no way of detecting whether you're having XXY, ZZR or KKU — khaled
there is no practical difference between you having XXY or ZZR or KKU. — khaled
someone having XXY and someone having GGR will act the exact same way. — khaled
Then again, you never have identical brain states. Or identical brains. — khaled
Sure — khaled
No I don't agree there. What makes you think that?
I would agree that identical brain activity will produce experiences that occupy the same structure. But I don't see a reason to believe they're the same. — khaled
We have taken no measures to examine X and Y directly. — khaled
Every measure we have taken would produce the same result were they different. Because every measure we have taken can only say things about the positions, not contents of our experiences. If you think otherwise give an example. — khaled
I am pointing out that we have just as much reason to believe they are the same as to believe they are different. — khaled
So "red" cannot be referring to X (as you were having Y) and "green" cannot be referring to Y (as you were having X) — khaled
No. It was X,X, Y and Y,Y, X. Point is it's the same structure. As in, the first two objects are the same color and the last one is different.
If you were seeing X, X, Y and I was seeing X, Y, Z when looking at 3 objects one of us is color blind. Portably you. As for you, the first and second object seem the same color. While for me all 3 are different colors. — khaled
We've just established that we do, in fact, have words for X, Y and Z — Isaac
We don't. — khaled
So they're not private then. We talk about them and have words for them. — Isaac
No. As my example showed, you can have radically different experiences and still talk. A public language about private experiences. — khaled
Correct. That's precisely the Xs and Ys. I just use them as placeholders. — khaled
We talk to other people about them. — Isaac
So if you never learned a language you couldn't be angry? — khaled
Xs and Ys are experiences. They're that "feeling of deciding something" in epiphenomenalism. — khaled
You ask how we know our own experiences exist? You also have to answer that question then. — khaled
No. Different physical effects produce Xs and Ys. We just came back from an epiphenomenalism thread. — khaled
