What It Is Like To Experience X So let's imagine that there's an experiential state someone is in. This is how what they're doing feels. (edit: pay no attention to the situation and agent demarcations here, they are behind the curtain, there's also a fixity to the experiences in the presentation which arguably is not there - fixed by a phenomenological approach to description itself)
I'm currently in a room, with a mood, and doing some stuff.
I can stratify that into some distinct experiences.
I am in my room, I am curious, reflecting, I am typing on my laptop.
I can stratify those experiences in various ways. One way would be by sensory modality:
Vision: I'm looking at this page on TPF.
Hearing: Ringing in my ears, keyboard clicks.
Bodily position: sitting down.
Touch: fingers on keys, bum sitting down, pressure from headphones.
Thought: state of attention, introspective.
Smell: nothing of note.
Temperature: not of much note, a bit cold maybe.
I can stratify the vision experience into objects with positional relations between them, each object has shapes and colours.
I can stratify the hearing experience into distinct sound sources; ringing in my ears, keyboard clicks, occasional noise from the road outside.
I don't seem to be able to stratify the bodily position experience very well; it is a general sense of attended parts and where I am in the room, different parts are highlighted more or less at different points; my felt bodily position also seems to involve my vision somehow - where is my body? involves vision (but need not...).
I can stratify the fingers on keys into individual keystrokes; decomposing into pressure and... but this relies upon the positional awareness and visual information (where the keys are, the words on the page provide feedback, typo correction etc)
The thought experiences; I dunno, I'm catching thoughts and expressing them, the thoughts come as the words appear on the page; the thought formation and the keystroke experiences intermingle.
Smell: nothing of note, not really part of the experiential state.
Temperature: tied up with position feelings and bodily awareness, different parts are different temperatures, felt temperature variation occurs over my body, the intensities of temperature are not discrete, more a general sense over my body.
Which parts do we attach the label "quale" to?
I can very easily do that with my vision in a limited way; shape qualia and colour qualia - but are there distance qualia (how far something away is)? Brightness qualia? Opacity qualia?
Hearing: well I guess there's a 'what's it like' to have this ringing in my ears, but there are tonal variations, different intensities, the 'position' the sound appears to be emitted from in my ears changes with its pitch. Does each tone have a quale? Each pressure? Each felt location of origination?
Bodily position: interesting really, I'm not aware of most of my body during most of this state of awareness; my state of awareness does not chart every piece of leg, say, just bits of contact with the chair that are deemed relevant (those that are in contact). The "qualia" I'd associate with my leg positions seem to go away when I focus close to my bum, there's just a.. 'leg-bum' location, the contact area is treated as a single experiential unity with differences of intensity over it.
Touch: well, when I'm typing, not every keystroke I type actually has the same quale - is there a G key quale? When I'm hitting the space bar, I don't always notice it. I do always notice the end of the sentence, though. Maybe there are full stop quales. Or are these 'sentence ending" quales?
But I'm not really experiencing the end of the sentence through my sense of touch; there is a pause for thought. The touch quale there is really a thought quale and a bodily position quale (of stopping motion).
I could go on, but this is already long enough. It seems to me that that 'chopping up' of experience that we do prior to applying the label "quale" to it isn't particularly reflective of what it's like at all. What it's like to be in any experiential state is a colossal feedback and intermingling of my senses and thoughts.
And qualia aren't supposed to label "experiential states", they're supposed to label "components" of them. Where do the components come from? What principle distinguishes them? Are these distinctions retroactive or part of the phenomenal character?
It seems to me the types of qualia people usually talk about just aren't so independent or distinctive after all; the principle that individuates the components of phenomenal character is not tracked by the principle of individuation that generates phrases like "red quale".