But if you can talk about it to others, then it is by definition not private.
And so, since we are talking about it, it's not happening only inside your head. — Banno
If one sets up a private thingie, one become unable to talk about it. — Banno
What I don't seem able to do is give a similar account of what using a word privately to refer to your own private thought might be. — Isaac
You can't show me a copy of your pain, or your red qual. — Banno
Even if you can refer to it, and that is not clear, it does not refer to anything someone else can refer to, so it drops out of the conversation. — Banno
A private language is a language that someone else cannot understand. Hence, if something is private, the it is not available for discussion.
Yet synesthesia, and pain, and the colour red, and so on, are available for discussion. Hence they are not private.
So there is something deeply problematic in philosophical discussions that propose private "phenomena" that they then proceed to describe in detail. — Banno
Anyway, that's a side issue to your suggesting that synesthesia is problematic for Wittgenstein. Have you droped that view?
So, going back to your question, how does any of this pose a problem for Wittgenstein, or for Davidson? It seems to me to reinforce his point, that what we talk about is public, and if it is private it drops out of our conversation.
And that is pretty much what I would offer as "what I mean" by private and public. — Banno
It isn't evidence at all, of any private unsharable phenomena. — Banno
Yeah, you can, because they can tell you. Indeed, that's how we know about synaesthesia. — Banno
It's not private. — Banno
How could you tell they see the water as green? Ex hypothesi, there is no distinction here. What difference would there be between the critter saying "There is a good quantity of water" and "the water is green"? — Banno
But make no mistake: Your "job" -- the useful thing you do for other people -- is all you are.
The experiment you've provided shows none of these three claims. — Isaac
What empirical evidence? — Isaac
There is no color in light. Color is in the perceiver, not the physical stimulus. This distinction is critical for understanding neural representations, which must transition from a representation of a physical retinal image to a mental construct for what we see. Here, we dissociated the physical stimulus from the color seen by using an approach that causes changes in color without altering the light stimulus. We found a transition from a neural representation for retinal light stimulation, in early stages of the visual pathway (V1 and V2), to a representation corresponding to the color experienced at higher levels (V4 and VO1). The distinction between these two different neural representations advances our understanding of visual neural coding.
...
Color is a perceptual construct that arises from neural processing in hierarchically organized cortical visual areas. Previous research, however, often failed to distinguish between neural responses driven by stimulus chromaticity versus perceptual color experience. An unsolved question is whether the neural responses at each stage of cortical processing represent a physical stimulus or a color we see. The present study dissociated the perceptual domain of color experience from the physical domain of chromatic stimulation at each stage of cortical processing by using a switch rivalry paradigm that caused the color percept to vary over time without changing the retinal stimulation. Using functional MRI (fMRI) and a model-based encoding approach, we found that neural representations in higher visual areas, such as V4 and VO1, corresponded to the perceived color, whereas responses in early visual areas V1 and V2 were modulated by the chromatic light stimulus rather than color perception. Our findings support a transition in the ascending human ventral visual pathway, from a representation of the chromatic stimulus at the retina in early visual areas to responses that correspond to perceptually experienced colors in higher visual areas.
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Vision is effortless. We recognize faces, navigate a crowded sidewalk, or judge the ripeness of strawberries with ease. These behaviors depend on the light entering the eyes, but what we experience follows from biological responses to light that result in seeing. A sharp distinction between the physical image in the eye versus the biologically rendered percept from the image is essential for understanding vision.
Historical theories of color vision failed to appreciate this distinction, leading to the mistaken assumption that color perception could be explained by the laws of physics. We now know that the colors we see follow from biological neural representations generated by light, but light itself carries no color.
You've not given any account of why you dismiss this meta-theory... — Isaac
So does the standard model, but without these holes. I'm asking why you choose the model with the holes (or why they are not, for you, holes at all). Why choose a model which creates this difficult to explain phenomena contrary to what we already have regarding evolved characteristics, when there appears to be no call for it? — Isaac
Exactly. so what is the equivalent situation with 'seeing red' to which you want to extend this physiological response?
Your argument so far seems to be that because pain is a physiological state, then so can 'red' be. But that's woefully inadequate as a theory. — Isaac
Hmm so you were distinguishing neural alarm from bodily trauma? — bongo fury
I'm suggesting the pain is the recognition of the trauma — bongo fury
They suffered the trauma. My car suffers trauma. And pain, but only metaphorically. They, though, probably also had enough symbolic ability to associate it with trauma in general. Which is how we suffer pain literally. Perhaps. — bongo fury
But then, applying that to the snooker balls, you're averse to saying that seeing the ball as red has something to do with associating it with red surfaces generally? For example by reaching for the word "red". I thought you might be. Slightly surprised that you reply with "sure".
If you're not totally averse to that, though, how about that being in pain is associating the bodily trauma in question with bodily trauma in general? For example by reaching for the word "pain". — bongo fury
This is where it gets interesting. How divergent can someone get with their apparent language of colors... — Richard B
I start from a principle that features of human physiology evolved within a system where their cost did not exceed their survival benefit. In such a system, it would be practically impossible for the huge amount of calories mental processes consumes to be justified if all it did was detect internal states of the same system, I can't see the survival advantage.
So I'm asking you what the survival advantage is, or what your alternative meta-biological theory is. Without either I can't see how you can sustain the model with such glaring holes in it. — Isaac
Here's a model of pain...
1. an external state (light) stimulates a nociceptive nerve ending
2. that signal (among hundreds of others) travels through an hierarchical system of prediction engines which attempt to output a response appropriate to reducing the uncertainty of that external state (either by manipulating the external state by acting on it, or by refining the model by further focussed investigation)
3. one of those outputs is to alter the release rate of certain hormones which in turn influence the output of other prediction engines (shifting their priors slightly in favour of certain types of output)
4. This state of affairs, this hormone affected setup, if you were to report it (either to yourself, or to others) you would use the expression "feeling pain" to describe.
If the above were the case then how would it clash with what you claim here to "know" about your feeling pain. If the last thing your brain does, after going through the process of predicting the state of external nodes, is to render a self-report which you respond to as a 'feeling of pain', then how would you distinguish that from the actual functioning of your brain in response to external stimuli? — Isaac
Right. So what's the point of it?
If what we're sensing is not a property of anything external to the system doing the sensing, then why is that system sensing anything at all? Why is it only detecting properties it itself has made up? — Isaac
I'm not getting anything of the meta-biological framework your theory sits within.
Yes. Primarily 'feeling' is a term we use for multiple meanings, one of which is a summary of your mental state "how are you feeling today?". So "I feel pain" and "I feel the grass" have two different meanings. The former being used in the sense of describing a state of mind, the latter in the sense of touch-sensation.
You specifically wanted to talk about the problem of epistemology with regard to perception and not want to get caught up in semantics. Given the, it is only this latter sense of 'feel' we're interested in here, the one which is about you sensing the external world with your nervous system. — Isaac
But perhaps you need to have brain activity that succeeds in associating the red ball with red surfaces generally, and the blue ball with blue surfaces generally?
Having red or blue mental images in the brain, to meet that purpose, is kind of having a ghost in the machine.
Having the brain reach for suitable words or pictures, isn't. And, even better, it suggests a likely origin of our tendency to imagine that we accommodate the ghostly entities. — bongo fury
But if you said, “I can see that one is green, and one is yellow”, can you be said to being seeing at all. — Richard B
Think you of the fact that a deaf person cannot hear. Then, what deafness may we not all possess? What senses do we lack that we cannot see and cannot hear another world all around us?
Bornblind people can tell you that an object can't be all red and all blue at the same time. — green flag
Wait a minute, though. So they learn what 'pain' means from other people ? But haven't you been saying (basically) that it's label on something internal ? That it refers to a state of an immaterial ghost ?
But how could a parent ever check if the child was labelling states of the ghost correctly ? The whole theory of the ghost as the ground of meaning is like the idea of phlogiston or the ether. It plays no real role. 'Pain' is a mark or noise that a little primate might make to be comforted or medicated. — green flag
Imagine a person is not acting and still insists, while smiling and laughing, that they are suffering 'excruciating pain.' If they 'have' to be acting or not understanding English, that just supports my point. — green flag
If you stopped at the light because you saw that it was red, seeing was the cause and stopping was the effect. How can the effect be part of the cause? That appears to be an abuse of language. — frank
You seem to be hinting at truth apart from language, but to me that's a round square. Statements are true sometimes. Or we take them to be true...to express what is the case, etc. — green flag
What if we cut out the middle man ? 'Seeing red' is acting accordingly, etc. We wise others decide that you saw red because you stopped at the light. (Stopping at the light is part of seeing red.) — green flag
But I insist that we have public criteria for when it's correct to assert someone is in pain. — green flag
But on your view we couldn't say that. Because your view allows for that person's pain to be what we call ecstasy. — green flag
Here's what doesn't make sense : "It really hurts to chew broken glass, so he stuffed another handful in his mouth." — green flag
"You can't know if my red is your red because seeing is private experience." — green flag
