It's hard to see where he's committing a fallacy. — Sam26
Brain activity that triggers the vocalization of the expression "I am conscious." There's nothing special about those words. "I am conscious" is no more an indicator of consciousness than "one plus one equals two." They're just sounds that can result from mechanical operations. — Michael
Exactly. The "meaning" here would be the "thing" that you try to put in first place. — Heiko
But that is the same as saying when looking on a piece of paper (form) with a text written on it (content), the content was not experienced. It doesn't matter if you are able or unable to translate the text as we are not dealing with it's meaning. — Heiko
Okay, another try: You take the synthesis of form and content and say the content was not experienced, as if we were talking cause-and-effect. But that is not the relation between form and content. — Heiko
You were - in consequence - saying that, when I play guitar, that I am not hearing my play. That is what I deemed objectionable. The form of hearing what I play has the activity of my fingers, the vibration of the strings and the sound-waves as content. — Heiko
Are first-person experiences a thing? I think they are. If they are, then you are admitting there is some thing in the universe that cannot be described by another observer. — RogueAI
According to our investigations there are electromagnetic wavelengths that give rise to seeing coloured things in suitably equipped percipients, but those wavelengths are not themselves consciously experienced, obviously. — Janus
What about when a group of top international
chefs get together for some food tasting? — Joshs
(That is not to say there cannot be more complex culinary judgements that do involve some discourse, of course—first course, second course or main course :wink: ). — Janus
David Chalmers: 'First-person experience is such that it cannot be fully described in third-person terms. Experience is inherently subjective, it has a quality of "something it is like to be...", and that quality is inherently irreducible to an objective description.'
Daniel Dennett: 'No, it isn't. A properly elaborated third-person description will leave nothing out. So there is no "hard problem" at all.' — Wayfarer
where wishful thinking often dooms sensible ideas thoughts on the matter. — I like sushi
Dunno - if the experience is thought as some kind of "detector", does that notion make sense? Given: the vocabulary is obviously different. — Heiko
Then I am embarrassed for not making it clear I wasn’t talking about flavor. — Mww
That you like cauliflower now, but dislike it later, are each nonetheless aesthetic judgements. That you are fickle with respect to your feelings regarding cauliflower over time, does not carry over to the fickle-ness of the judgements regarding the stuff, insofar as each judgement arises simultaneously with, and necessarily representative of, the feeing. — Mww
It seems there's no reason to suppose that packing more and more information-processing functions into a program would ever yield the sort of "subjective character" of experience that's said to generate the hard problem of consciousness. — Cabbage Farmer
What is "over and above" the qualities we find in things? Is there anything like that? All we can say about the world is going to be related to whatever happens to interact with our cognitive capacitates and sensations. — Manuel
That's just the thing, Dennett is far from being clear on what he stance is. Searle, Strawson, Tallis, McGinn, Goff, Kastrup and many others take Dennett to be denying these things. — Manuel
Clearly Dennett is smart, speaks well, gives good examples. But he's leaving plenty of room for doubt when he says "there seems to be qualia".
I take him to be just saying that those quantiies are not what we might think they are due to our intuitive tendency to reify and create superfluous entities via language. — Janus
What is the colour experience red, aside from our experience of it? We can proceed to speak of wave-lengths, but that's not colour experience. — Manuel
But he's denying qualia, clearly. — Manuel
Of course Dennett doesn't say that 'consciousness is an illusion' in so many words, but it is the only reasonable surmise as to the implication of his ideas, which is that mind, or even being (as in, human being) is an illusory consequence of the co-ordinated activity of cellular and molecular processes which alone are real. He's a materialist, right? That's what materialism says. — Wayfarer
And I say I’m not the one misunderstanding him. I’ll leave it there except for this review. — Wayfarer
Dennett went on record to say that consciousness is an illusion. — TheMadFool
I don't think Dennett means we are robots i — Janus
You don't think Dennett means anything he says, because if you thought he did mean anything he actually says, then you would flee screaming from it. :lol:
Make no mistake - Dennett seems a nice person, civil, educated, and so on, but his "philosophy" so called is utterly soul-destroying and a symptom of "the decline of the West". — Wayfarer
OK then, if not zombies, how about robots? — Wayfarer
Just as naive realism is prereflectively common, so it goes with naive idealism too. — Janus
Wouldn’t matter either way; it’s beside the point. — Mww
Of course they do. Aesthetic judgements switch at the drop of a news cycle, or the newest gadget, or supposed slight from a passer-by; discursive judgements are bound by the knowledge relative to the times. Two different kinds of cycles of independent change. — Mww
Of course , I didn’t have in mind trivial aesthetic judgements , but the range of artistic expressions that you will likely to find if you walk into your local modern art museum or gallery. If you talk to those artists, you will find all sorts of complex underlying assumptions they share with the larger scientific community and which inform and direct their work. — Joshs
He says that our normal understanding of ourselves as agents is an illusion generated by the unconscious cellular processes operating according to the demands of adaptation. 'Unconscious competence', he calls it. He says it over and over, it's hard not to understand it. — Wayfarer
That is, the "always already conceptually shaped" is simply a misstatement not justified by any history of science or of thought, but rather itself an absolute presupposition of (apparently) McDowell's thinking. — tim wood
Styles of English Lit. and hem-lines, on the other hand, even within a relatively short time can change markedly. — tim wood
There's been nothing 'gradual' about the pace of development since the industrial revolution. Back in the Old Stone Age, it took half a million years for the form of the stone ax to evolve. — Wayfarer
Daniel Dennett's claims that consciousness is an illusion is of particular interest to me. — TheMadFool
If one really were ‘agile and capable of pivot on a dime’, and the other ‘entrenched and not easily subject to change’ they would create entirely independent cycles of change , which they dont. — Joshs
