So it's not that "'pain' does not refer to an experience", as if it might refer to something else. Rather, it's that "'pain' does not refer". At least, not in the same way that "apple" does. — Banno
We can “cure” some forms of color blindness or deafness and you always see the participant being shocked at the experience. I’m pretty sure you’d still get the same reaction even if the participant had a PhD in neurology. — khaled
Where oh where does the color come from? — Marchesk
So if someone doesn’t understand the public concept they do not have an experience? What about children then, do they have experiences?
And could you elaborate on what the “public meaning” of red exactly is? Because I would argue that the public meaning is a reference to an experience. — khaled
Do you still hold this position? Because it seems exactly like something I would say. Here you recognise that there is an experience X that cannot be communicated 100% accurately. — khaled
We certainly feel like we have some experience of "redness" when looking at a red screen — khaled
Wow - all that results from a public concept? — Luke
"phenol-thio-urea., a substance which tastes very bitter to three-fourths of humanity, and as tasteless as water to the rest. Is it bitter?" — Luke
Why must it come down to a matter of ability? — Luke
Sure, not if we don't see colours. — Luke
So why does it seem like we see colours? — Luke
You have to remember we live about twelve hours in your future. It's already Friday night here, and the 'roo is currying. — Banno
Time for dinner. This is not interesting. — Banno
could you link it so I don’t have to rummage through 44 pages? — khaled
I would surmise that it is because the taste exists as an experience, and it does not exist unless it is experienced by someone. Therefore, it's the way it tastes for someone, or when someone experiences it. That is, the way it tastes is the taste experience. — Luke
You mean that the sensation of taste cannot have those properties only to you. That doesn't mean that it cannot have those properties to you. But neither does it mean that it has those properties to everyone. — Luke
I can't possibly think one thing is 'sweet' whilst other people think a different thing is 'sweet' — Isaac
Then what of intuition pump #10? Perhaps perceptual norms affect linguistic norms? — Luke
I might be able to detect sweetness in something that other people cannot, but what sweetness is must be public. — Isaac
If it's not sweet/bitter for everybody, then maybe it's only public for some people but not for others? — Luke
We learn what 'sweet' means by experiencing the use of the word in our shared world, not our private one. — Isaac
Yes, but "if we construe the grammar of the expression of sensation on the model of ‘object and name’, then the object drops out of consideration as irrelevant." So our spectra could very well be inverted without either of us noticing. — Luke
You don't see a colour. Why Am I having to repeat this? You do not see a colour. There's no part of your brain which represents a particular colour. It doesn't happen, not there, absent, not present, unrepresented, lacking, missing , devoid. — Isaac
Then how do we distinguish colours? How is it that I am able to fetch a red object upon request? — Luke
That's what 'a red apple' means. adding 'what we call...' to it implies that there might actually be a red apple other than what we call one. — khaled
I seriously doubt it. — Olivier5
↪Isaac
That's rather the point at issue. — Banno — khaled
I don’t think many would answer that but if that’s your answer then I see why you’d say qualia don’t exist. Seems nonsensical to me to say that if I’m literally forced to lie about the color I’m seeing that I’m actually seeing the color that is the lie. — khaled
Yes. A red apple. — Isaac
More accurately “what we all call a red apple”. Public meaning and all that. — khaled
If you ask people to pass you the red apple, do you generally find they pass you the one you were expecting? — Isaac
Correct. That is no evidence to indicate they have the same experience when holding the red apple as I do when I hold it. — khaled
Say I was wearing glasses that inverted all the color going into my eye. — khaled
So in this previous example I just said, am I still seeing a red apple with those devices on? Even though the light coming into my eye is inverted? — khaled
I definitely see something when looking at a red apple. — khaled
I do not know if you see the same thing. — khaled
Maybe what you’re seeing I would describe as “blue”. — khaled
Correct. Does this imply that we are experiencing the same thing when looking at the apple? — khaled
And then conceded that the intent behind the expression is as I described. I’m not proposing a neurological theory here, I’m saying what the intent behind the expression “the apple is red” is — khaled
If an apple has a taste, then there is a way it tastes. Am I Englishing wrong? — Luke
If apples have a taste then you can taste them (or not), which means they taste some way to you. I’m not suggesting it becomes some other thing in your mind, but it becomes something in your mind: a sensation of taste. That sensation of taste probably has properties, such as sweet, bitter, juicy, sharp, etc. — Luke
When people say “The apple is red” they do not really care about what color gets imagined in your head. — khaled
You think that the word “qualia” has an intentionally nonsensical meaning? — Luke
Why does it need to be considered as an “intermediary” instead of just the (quality of the) experience that a person has? — Luke
The way things taste, look, sound, feel to a particular person. — Luke
“qualia” isn’t one of those words. — Luke
They inevitably end up doubting really obvious stuff like their own consciousness — RogueAI
I meant that we cannot pick out precisely determinate features of our inner lives to share, as we can with perceptible objects. — Janus
I guess we don't even need to speak about quality of experience, but just about the experience itself. — Janus
But if we all think we enjoy an inner life, then even though we cannot directly share our inner lives in the way we can directly share the sensory world, could it not be sensical to talk about our inner lives — Janus
why aren’t all language games sensical? — Luke
Good. Then you should accept that it’s not senseless to talk about qualia or inverted spectra. — Luke
Because the Hard Problem hasn't been solved. Ergo, the book you linked doesn't solve it. — RogueAI
I don't think neuroscience is going to solve the hard problem. The idea that you can mix non-conscious stuff around in a certain way and add some electricity to it and get consciousness from it is magical thinking. — RogueAI
Since we know consciousness exists — RogueAI
we should doubt the non-conscious stuff exists. We have no evidence that it does anyway. Why assume it exists? — RogueAI
You are confusing the easy problem (neural correlates of mental states) with the Hard Problem (how does non-conscious stuff produce conscious experience). Chalmer's paper is a great place to start. This is also good: https://iep.utm.edu/hard-con/ — RogueAI
If we're making astonishing progress, shouldn't somebody have seen something that points the way to a mechanism by now? — RogueAI
How does the feeling of pain emerge from non-thinking/feeling stuff? — RogueAI
You’re the only one bringing up any belief about being able to predict the future perfectly. That’s not anything I’m talking about at all. — Pfhorrest
I’m saying that if you see something and think “whoa a black swan, I didn’t think those were possible...” — Pfhorrest
If instead you see the same thing and think “oh look, somebody painted that swan black...” then you don’t have to revise any beliefs because a fake black swan is what your background beliefs initially lead you to perceive and that doesn’t contradict any other beliefs such as that all swans are white. — Pfhorrest
I’m saying that if P(A) is small and P(B) is small then P(A)*P(B) is small. “P(A)*P(B)” is the probabilistic equivalent of “A and B” in the same way that “P(A|B)” is the probabilistic equivalent of “A if B”. — Pfhorrest
Links to fascinating studies answering this too:
Start with an ape? In what situation might it have the brain shivers that you would describe as having a mental image and I would describe as readying to select among pictures? — bongo fury
Still, the mental images (whatever we call them or construe them as) aren't traces, or recordings. — bongo fury
As for the 'physical trace', I'm happy to leave that to science. There's a growing body of evidence on the topic...@Isaac? — Banno
At this juncture, it is clear that the bulk of the evidence supports the claim that visual mental imagery not only draws on many of the same mechanisms used in visual perception, but also that topographically organised early visual areas play a functional role in some types of imagery.
Or, as I say, persuade me otherwise, by better describing a typical occasion on which an animal recalls a scene to mind. — bongo fury
So you were not surprised by the apparently purple swan, and it was consistent with your prior beliefs? Then you have no contradictory observations to falsify anything. You just saw something consistent with your expectations. — Pfhorrest
I never said it was. I say that the probabilistic equivalent of a conditional statement is a conditional probability: the probabilistic equivalent of "B if A" is "P(B|A)". (I did misleadingly say that "P(B|A)" was equivalent to "P(B if A)", but that was for a natural-language reading of "B if A", and that equivalency is only problematic when "B if A" is taken as a strict material implication). — Pfhorrest
This still accords with Bayesian reasoning, because you could reason along the same lines, but probabilistically instead of in those absolute statements. If the thing you're observing is very likely to be a real purple swan given your background beliefs, and yet it's very likely that all swans are white given what you believe about swans, then what you're observing must be very improbable. — Pfhorrest
I doubt that we ourselves do it before we grasp the reference of words and pictures.
I'm open to persuasion though. — bongo fury
This still accords with Bayesian reasoning, because you could reason along the same lines, but probabilistically instead of in those absolute statements. If the thing you're observing is very likely to be a real purple swan given your background beliefs, and yet it's very likely that all swans are white given what you believe about swans, then what you're observing must be very improbable — Pfhorrest
Other way around: you change the beliefs which initially lead you to construe your experience as genuinely seeing a real purple swan, if you instead conclude that you must have been deceived. — Pfhorrest
It's in that sense that although we can never be sure any particular set of beliefs is the correct, we can be sure that some particular set of beliefs is an incorrect one, if e.g. that particular set of beliefs says both that all swans are white and that the thing we're seeing right now is a purple swan. We can't be sure which of those (or which part of which of them) is incorrect, but we can be sure that the world definitely isn't exactly like that, it's different than we thought in some way or another. — Pfhorrest
