If there is no internal world, why don’t you see what other people think? — leo
They don’t really think? You’re a solipsist? — leo
Reminds me of the aliens in Liu Cixin's Three Body Problem trilogy. Their thoughts are always visible to one another as patterns of lights which are the result of their neural activity. They communicate directly in that sense. — Marchesk
So, perfection? — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe it's one of those things, like learning a language, easy when you're a child, but difficult when you're older. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are the colors we experience out there in the world as such? Or are they generated by our conscious visual system? — Marchesk
But what makes the visible light special such that it's colored, unlike radio and gamma rays? — Marchesk
Yes, so what makes the colors real? — Marchesk
Do you think photons are actually colored? — Marchesk
As physical waves, not experiences of color or sound. — Marchesk
The problem is those sounds and colors don't exist in external objects. It's rather sound waves and photons. — Marchesk
The sounds and colors we experience are shivered into existence. — Marchesk
Okay, but if i'm brain shivering color and pain, that still needs to be explained. — Marchesk
It's just if consciousness can be an illusion, — Marchesk
Or an external one? That sword can cut either way. — Marchesk
Have we been talking past each other all this time? — Mijin
No, I don't want to call consciousness an illusion. — Mijin
In fact, to me I don't see the point: it's essentially saying that we don't have feelings, we just feel we do. — Mijin
Indeed. Even the illusion is itself being conscious of something. — Marchesk
You haven't given any argument to think such a thing though, — Mijin
What's the distinction between the illusion of consciousness and consciousness? — Mijin
The same as the distinction between an illusion of consciousness that (like the Chinese Room) doesn't have a proper semantics, and one that does. — bongo fury
Let's get back to brass tacks: I'm in agonizing pain. Is this pain an illusion, and if so, what's the difference if the illusion is also painful? — Mijin
between a self-driving car able through mere syntax to complain of bodily trauma and [on the other hand] an as yet fictional self-driving car able to play the social game of pointing appropriate words at the same trauma. — bongo fury
The same causes lead to the same effects, and that is the syntax (the rule). The semantics is the relationship between cause and effect. — Harry Hindu
Your disagreement isn't a valid argument against anything I've said. — Harry Hindu
Then semantics/meaning is a fiction?
Wouldn't that mean that syntax is non-fiction? — Harry Hindu
As I alluded, there's no distinction between being in pain and the illusion of pain if both hurt. — Mijin
In the case of the Chinese Room (some) conscious humans are under the misconception that a computer is conscious. — Daemon
Meaning exists wherever causes leave effects. — Harry Hindu
It's not some special thing or process that only exists as a feature of minds. — Harry Hindu
We could say "whatever is actually happening in our mental process, we'll call that 'consciousness' and work out what properties it has - I think that's the route you're drawn from the sound of it. — Isaac
I was just citing Searle's examples. — apokrisis
So to the degree that you are only concerned with linguistic semiosis, you are not engaging with my biosemiosis. — apokrisis
Like the weather or a carburettor, the neural collective is actually pushing and shoving against the real world.
That then is the semantics that breathes life into the syntax. And that is also the semantics that is missing if a brain, a carburettor or the weather is reduced to a mere syntactical simulation. — apokrisis
But there just is no fact of the matter whether a word or picture is pointed at one thing or another. No physical bolt of energy flows from pointer to pointee(s). So the whole social game is one of pretence. Albeit of course a hugely powerful one.
— bongo fury
Can it both be a pretence (in physical terms) and yet also a hugely powerful one? — apokrisis
But of course, as I said, the power of any code is that it is not tied to the physics of its world. — apokrisis
It is powerful because it could refer to anything. — apokrisis
That means when it is not used that [just any] way, but instead pointed rather precisely, that is what makes it meaningful - signal rather than noise. — apokrisis
One can’t be definitely pretending anything unless that is a clear contrast to the “other” of now making clear and meaningful reference to something understood to have a genuine social reality. Something that is of material consequence. — apokrisis
I'm not really following Bongo. — Daemon
As in, "no", or "to the delight and justified exasperation of dualists everywhere"? — Banno
Goodman — Banno
I think the context is important here — Mijin