Dennett has his own schematic for sensory processing in the brain. Are you familiar with it? What's your assessment of it? — frank
it might be simplest to call what System 1 gets up to "caused" but a lot of those habitual responses are caused in a way that will pass muster and reflect repeated earlier effortful examination of things by System 2, so we might as well call those causes "reasons" in the non-causal sense too, the sense in which "justification" is not a synonym for "rationalization".
If challenged, a person might engage System 2 and begin a process of assembling the evidence they are comfortable claiming underlies a belief; we can call that "rationalization" in a wide sense, allowing that we might approve or disapprove of their claims for evidentiary import, etc. (Sellars seems more or less to claim that saying "I know" just signals we are now playing a language-game that requires everyone to put on their System 2 hats -- it puts a claim "in the space of reasons".) Or they might refuse to engage System 2 (wait -- is that even possible??) with a bare "I just know" and philosophers tend to frown upon that. — Srap Tasmaner
So there are two kinds of criticisms that can sometimes and sometimes not be made about the same beliefs:
formed with minimal "input" from the environment and considerable input from your other beliefs or "gut reactions";
"insulated" or "protected" from possible revision.
Philosophers don't like either of these but will let the first slide so long as you are open to revision; the second is more or less sinful. Are there good general-purpose ways of talking about these things? — Srap Tasmaner
It’s the “checking” part that makes the difference, between acting like the observations you happen to have made so are plenty (and possibly even being averse to makings further observations that might compel you to change your mind), and actively seeking out more observations to make sure that they continue the pattern. — Pfhorrest
You might instantly form a belief that the place is dangerous from that. But do you know it is dangerous? This is where a person has to actively and consciously examine their beliefs. — Philosophim
We cannot say that our belief in A is justified by the deductive argument 'If B then A, B therefore A' because our belief that B might be what is at fault, or our belief that 'if B then A'. — Isaac
That's not contrary to my views at all. (I've just been saying in the past few posts that a "belief" as I mean it is formed from a "perception", which in turn is exactly some interpretation of evidence). I think maybe you're reading in more than I intend to say. — Pfhorrest
I'm counting being uninterested in checking your beliefs against the senses as "ignoring empirical evidence".
Plenty of people ignore claims that there is empirical evidence to the contrary of their beliefs, rather than actually check if those claims pan out. That's being unresponsive to reality. — Pfhorrest
it's still in a feedback relationship with the lower level models - promoting certain actions, certain adjustments, the formation of certain perceptual features, the exploration of our environment to form new task relevant features etc. It doesn't look like there's a distinct "submission" operation to consciousness, it's more that the apportioning of conscious awareness is interweaved with a concentration of bodily effort and attention relative to a task. — fdrake
Another way of making the point: that conscious awareness "coming online as it is" isn't in a temporal order with perceptual feature formation (this, then that), it's part of the hierarchical order within perceptual feature formation (this is an upper part of that). If the time part is weird (since the higher order parts time lag the lower parts); the apportioning of conscious awareness is a procedural component (systemic part) of perceptual feature formation - rather than a distinct procedure which the results of perceptual feature formation output to. — fdrake
It would be as if the effectiveness of the hierarchical structure in place entitled subsystems operating under top-down constraints to take credit for being thus constrained and count the very constraints they work under as their value added, and all to set up entitling awareness to claim credit for much more than just playing its allotted role. — Srap Tasmaner
The thought experiment is to help you understand the abstract context of the above. If I have an unexamined belief (which has nothing to do with the technical neurological process of how that belief was formed) and it just so happens to be right, was my unexamined belief knowledge? — Philosophim
The abstract point I'm making is we can have beliefs that are examined, and beliefs that are unexamined. Is an unexamined belief knowledge? — Philosophim
the belief I mentioned did not tie to anything that would indicate Joe dated a woman last night. — Philosophim
What measure of consciousness are you using then?
We were talking about definitions, not measures. — RogueAI
I'm not saying first-person subjective experience is a sufficient condition for a definition of consciousness, but it is a necessary condition. Agreed? — RogueAI
What action best describes scrolling down this page and coming across the picture of the two cars and identifying them as cars? I suppose, in a page of mostly text, an image is surprising and, when we become conscious of something surprising, the instinct is to identify it? — Kenosha Kid
I can imagine that, as infants, we might have suffered a period of time in which the brain had to learn how to do this. — Kenosha Kid
So there's a sense, then, in which our conscious perceptions are being assessed by our unconscious brains in order to fire/learn correction processes. Is it your assessment that this is done for the purpose of improving our awareness, or is that just a nice side effect? — Kenosha Kid
Not that this thread or Dennett's article is about judicious use of labels. Ultimately it doesn't matter whether we call them qualia or something else, so long as it's clear that 'qualia do not exist' means 'ineffable, intrinsic, private and immediate properties of consciousness do not exist' and not 'properties of consciousness do not exist'. — Kenosha Kid
the belief I mentioned did not tie to anything that would indicate Joe dated a woman last night. — Philosophim
That's an incomplete definition of consciousness. Reporting on mental activity isn't even a necessary condition for consciousness, let alone a sufficient one. — RogueAI
There is therefore something objective and operational about colours as we perceive them. — Olivier5
Consciousness is just the tendency to be able to report on mental activity and it's caused by the neurons which produce language, movement and other awareness-mediated responses being stimulated by the neurons constituting the processing of sensory inputs to which that awareness relates. — Isaac
As the subject, this is my tendency to be capable of reporting -- but not just on any mental activity, on my mental activity. I'm wondering if there are pre-utterance steps where some subsystem perhaps tags the analysis and speech prep being done as "me related", or if there aren't, and why we need or don't need such steps. — Srap Tasmaner
I only skimmed instead of rereading, but it seems to me Dennett might have added here that I am generally expected to know non-inferentially, and perhaps infallibly, whose qualia are rattling around in my consciousness, and to know that they are mine rather than yours. — Srap Tasmaner
If I may summarise, then, the conscious perception of my field may include something caused by a car without the car 'tag' (recognition of car object with or without dorsal data), then moments later updated with that tag. So I consciously see the light caused by the car before I see the car. — Kenosha Kid
to clarify, it's not a conscious decision to identify a car, right? Whenever the car recognition output is presented for conscious consideration, it's not doing so because I'm studying a patch of light and trying to figure out what it is. This is all going on in the background. — Kenosha Kid
Am I right in saying that, as you describe it, data from our conscious perception is fed back into these myriad cascades and may affect (or indeed effect) some of these unconscious processes — Kenosha Kid
Do these processes rely on this, or can we recognise objects just based on pre-processed data? This is again going back to the idea of sensory data categorised as unimportant, such as the sound of a car engine on a busy Manhattan block. — Kenosha Kid
What I meant about not throwing the baby out with the bathwater is that there still remain objects of subjective experience, such that I can see a car without consciously determining it to be a car (even if 1 ms ago I didn't see a car), and that this object is private (internal processing from my raw sensory input to instantaneous apprehension by me) and immediate (I see car as car object is presented to me, which may be some while after I see light from car), but not intrinsic or ineffable, and that these objects and the processes that yield them (e.g. neuron that recognises car) underlie our pre-theoretical conceptions of what theorists call qualia. — Kenosha Kid
And yet we all can agree than certain cars are blue, and others not. — Olivier5
there still exists an object of subjective experience as tagged by its outline. — Kenosha Kid
Here the 'car' quale means nothing more than that the image is presented for conscious appraisal with the 'car' tag, i.e. the 'car' neuron having fired with some degree of certainty. — Kenosha Kid
I'm not sure what responses you mean. — Kenosha Kid
Again, not sure what all these goings on means. — Kenosha Kid
Yes, I agree, this is Dennett's rejection of the intrinsic nature of qualia. I'm with you, and Dennett, on this, and I agree that this is what philosophers usually think of as qualia, incorrectly. — Kenosha Kid
if the error arises ultimately from treating experience as an entity which bears properties, how is it any better to treat it as an entity which bears relations (or other high order predicates)? — fdrake
The salient point in the devil's advocate is that the "fundamental error" seems to be claiming that or acting as if we experience experiential entities (which have or may be experiential properties), rather than experience itself being a mode of our interaction with entities.
That looks to me one way of fleshing out it being okay to say "The coffee tasted sweet today" but not "My subjective experience of today's coffee was partially constituted by a quale of sweetness". — fdrake
it's always good to hear an expert expunge. — Kenosha Kid
I'm not sure whether you're saying that the recognition of the car is part of the experience I am conscious of, which is also what I'm saying, or whether we consciously recognise the car, which flies in the face of my experience, and also seems to contradict the idea that the brain is adept at filtering out irrelevant sensory data that we are, consequently, unaware of (e.g. the sound of a car engine at night after living a month in Manhatten, versus the sound of a gunshot). — Kenosha Kid
The left car is blue. I am conscious of it being blue. I am not conscious of figuring out that it's blue: it's blueness is presented to my consciousness. — Kenosha Kid
I assume you mean that the timescales involved in consciously working stuff out is much slower than the timescales of photons-hitting-retina to conscious-of-image. It can't be too much later. I have present experience for a reason: present problems require present solutions. — Kenosha Kid
I've formed beliefs that just sprang up out of nowhere. — Philosophim
OK, what is your explanation for how non-conscious stuff, when assembled the right way, can produce consciousness? Because that seems like magic to me — RogueAI
If those things were impactful on the coffee experience (and we know they can be), the sensation of sweetness could not be modelled accurately as a unary predicate/property. There's just no place in a logical property for more than one term. That is to say, it's a higher order predicate of those things - at least a relation. — fdrake
I think it's more likely to mean that intellectual act I did when talking about "the sweetness of the coffee I had today", fixing some aspect of a memory using introspection, can all too readily produce unrealistic accounts of the thing in question. The error being that there was some sort of experiential entity which bore that property, contrasted to the fact that the coffee tasted sweet to me. — fdrake
he pretends to be able to divorce his apprehension (or recollection) of the quale--the taste, in ordinary parlance--from his different reactions to the taste. But this apprehension or recollection is itself a reaction to the presumed quale, so some sleight-of-hand is being perpetrated--innocently no doubt--by Chase — Dennet
A flattening of standards between that which concerns people's self reports of experiences and that which concerns all else. — fdrake
If there are qualia, they are even less accessible to our ken than we had thought. Not only are the classical intersubjective comparisons impossible (as the Brainstorm machine shows), but we cannot tell in our own cases whether our qualia have been inverted--at least not by introspection.
I think they're wrong, but at least they're addressing the problem. — RogueAI
I had zero justification for believing my friend dated a woman the night before. It was just a random belief. And I think that's the problem with your proposal. If you are to state knowledge is something we simply haven't had refuted yet, you allow beliefs without justification to be declared as knowledge. — Philosophim
I think whether the "first order properties" or "second order properties" are called into question depends on which intuition pump we're talking about. Intuition pump (1) looks to me to be about first order properties and how they are ascribed. First order being eg. "the taste of this cauliflower to me now" and second order being eg. "(the taste of this cauliflower to me now) is private and subjective" — fdrake
What are the first order properties? — Luke
Dennett says: qualia are magical and thus do not exist — Olivier5
Let's say there is a continent called SomewhereLand which many have traveled to, but none have returned from — Hippyhead
Upon what basis should we exclude any speculation about SomewhereLand? — Hippyhead
Where does he say that they are additional properties? In addition to what? — Luke
Traditional analyses suggest some fascinating second-order properties of these properties. — Dennet
And yet, you stated earlier:
One need not deny the existence of sense data properties to deny that calling them qualia is of any use, or to deny that they then exhibit any of the additional properties associated with qualia. — Isaac
Your position is that you don't need to deny sense data properties in order to deny qualia. But you deny sense data properties (without explaining the difference) anyway? Okay. — Luke
One need not deny the existence of sense data properties to deny that calling them qualia is of any use, or to deny that they then exhibit any of the additional properties associated with qualia. — Isaac
What distinction are you drawing between sense data properties and qualia? — Luke
You say that there are "additional properties associated with qualia", so what are the (non-additional) properties that you appear to indicate are shared by both sense data and qualia — Luke
I grant moreover that each person's states of consciousness have properties in virtue of which those states have the experiential content that they do. That is to say, whenever someone experiences something as being one way rather than another, this is true in virtue of some property of something happening in them at the time — Dennet
qualia are supposed to be properties of a subject's mental states that are
(1) ineffable (2) intrinsic (3) private (4) directly or immediately apprehensible in consciousness — Dennet
Proof that the grass is shorter now then it was before implies no necessity for the term “lawnmower”.
Your
intuition remains philosophical — Mww
........is out of context. — Mww
But is it really a shorthand for something? Could it be that the mind is a sieve that electrical and hormonal events flow through, leaving behind words as markers?
Or better: is there a theory out there (involving qualia) that pictures the mind this way when all that really exists is words? — frank
I figured that part of the exegesis would involve doing what he asks to see what happens. — frank
If it should become established that humans, ... don’t necessarily appeal to intuitions,... physically speaking, from proof of empirical brain mechanisms in which intuition is irrelevant, — Mww
...it [is] sloppy for anyone to use intuition as a psychological term; intuition remains philosophical — Mww
What intuitions did you encounter re: taste of pumpkins? — frank
A bird is a bird. Tautology. Nothing is being said in fact. — TheMadFool
Can Daniel Dennett describe to us what his supper and the wine he washed it down with, presuming that was/is his evening meal, tasted/tastes like? — TheMadFool
I have a different assessment of the degree of certainty of that claim. — Pfhorrest
