If by "experience" you mean some kind of mechanical thing happening in the subject, as you seem to, then there is no question.
The panpsychist like me says "yes", but it's nothing special or a different kind of stuff: it comes for free with the same stuff that does the behavior, but it is not identical to the behavior, but rather the flip side of the same thing the behavior is one side of: function.
This is a non-problem if you don't conceive of "qualia" as something that material things need to "produce", but just as an aspect of the being of all (material) things.
Of course we see the output. They are the nerve signals that get sent to the limbs to take action, or to the mouth to speak, etc. I did say that the output was our intent and actions.
Words can refer to imaginary things or illusions.
What do you mean by "physical" and "mental"?
Information is meaning.
A server.
I think a better term would be "information". Not physical or mental. Physical and mental is a false dichotomy that leads to dualism. Everything is information.
That a computer program could implement a mind. Now we're back to Searle's Chinese room. We have no evidence that a computer could implement a mind; only simulate an environment.
The computer is the best analogy for the mind that we've had in our history of thinking about the mind and its relationship with the world .
In other words, how would you arrive by computation to possibly the only certain epistemological and ontological true statement: “I think, therefore I know I exist”?
If it is consistent, then it is incomplete. If it is complete, then it is inconsistent.
I wonder if computability and epistemology are ultimately not one and the same thing?
researchers confirmed that the nervous system ‘can’ transmit messages to future generations.
Not at all. Numbers are not real as ‘electrochemical dynamics’. Here you’re mistaking an event for a representation.
Neural dynamics don’t ‘represent’ anything, they’re not signs. Science has sought to understand the neural events triggered by simple leaning tasks through scans, and no regularities or patterns can be found at all. It’s not as if some pattern of neural events ‘stands for’ a number or other kind of concept. This idea that concepts are neural events is the myth that underlies materialism, but it’s not true.
All you’re expressing is the belief that ‘everything exists in time and space’. But you’re not seeing that time and space themselves are co-created by the observing mind, they don’t have a reality independent of cognition. This is one of the cardinal points of Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason.
Ok. I did that.
How to know such a fact. Perhaps you meant, agreeing to assume?
So, such things as logical principles, scientific laws, mathematical objects, are all essential to empirical science, but they don't necessarily exist in time and space either.
Ideas are not real, precisely because they don't exist in time. That's what it means to be real, to exist in space and time.
What prevents us from imagining that we all wake up tomorrow and a circle is no longer round
Many axioms aren't self-evident in any fashion.
The Law of Identity states that a certain thing is identical to itself...
...and I ask why
The proposition is simply: A thing resembles itself. The question is, "what is the proof?"
"an apple is an apple", but why?
I do not see anyone trying to prove x=x
Aren't axioms, self-evident assumptions? If so, when can we accept self-evident beliefs, just when they are practical? Do we have to analyse the relation between truth and practicality then?
So, you believe that "virtual" and "potential" existence are equivalent to "real" and "actual or physical" existence?
Do you understand the difference when that pointer of yours points from, say an actual chair in a room, and virtual chair on a computer screen?
So, you believe that "virtual" and "potential" existence are equivalent to "real" and "actual or physical" existence?
Physical or actual includes both basic phenomena like magnetism or gravity, and also emergent phenomena like atoms, molecules, planets, stars, liquidity, acidity...
Abstract or virtual phenomena includes concepts like words, language, Batman, unicorn, algorithm, number, angle…
So, you believe that "virtual" and "potential" existence are equivalent to "real" and "actual or physical" existence?
There are only two possible modes of existence we know of: physical or actual and abstract or virtual.
So, you believe that "virtual" and "potential" existence are equivalent to "real" and "actual or physical" existence?
Note : a Virtual Electron is a potential particle, not an actual particle.
Virtual : not physically existing as such but made by software to appear to do so.
But it's only true for eyes that are the organs of conscious beings.
Why argue so convoluted. Our sensory organs transmit the signal by means of a biochemical electrical charge and our brains are able to interpret that signal in such a fashion that it provides us with knowledge about our environment. Don't have to make it more complicated than that.
An eye that can see is conscious of light.
Virtual : not physically existing as such but made by software to appear to do so.
Hence, a virtual electron is not, as you suggested, an electron in an alternative "physical form" in space-time, but merely a pointer to a meta-physical form in consciousness.
You equate "physical" and "actual", and I agree. But if a simulated electron is not physical & actual, what is it?
Therefore it is non-contradictory to say consciousness is a state of being conscious.
The TV does not register light. The TV does not react to light.
You can call it anything you like. I call as I see it. The camera is conscious of light, the TV is conscious of the signal it receives from the camera. As simple as that.
The TV is conscious of the signal it receives from the camera.
The camera is conscious of the light it receives from the TV.