Not at all. See above. Seeing is the process of updating predictions about external states. Two people can have different predictions about the same state. Seeing differently does not necessitate seeing different things. — Isaac
They're just doing it differently so getting different results. — Isaac
So person B can still 'see' the same hidden state as person A even though they respond differently to it because having a policy toward X is part of the process of 'seeing' X*. — Isaac
So answer me this: are there true propositions of which we do not know the truth value? — Banno
I think that there are, when we talk about stuff like cups and eggs and planets and so on. — Banno
DO you really think that the view described as "enactivism"view is a form of idealism? — Banno
Enactivism is a position in cognitive science that argues that cognition arises through a dynamic interaction between an acting organism and its environment. It claims that the environment of an organism is brought about, or enacted, by the active exercise of that organism's sensorimotor processes. "The key point, then, is that the species brings forth and specifies its own domain of problems ...this domain does not exist "out there" in an environment that acts as a landing pad for organisms that somehow drop or parachute into the world. Instead, living beings and their environments stand in relation to each other through mutual specification or codetermination" (p. 198). "Organisms do not passively receive information from their environments, which they then translate into internal representations. Natural cognitive systems...participate in the generation of meaning ...engaging in transformational and not merely informational interactions: they enact a world."
Ovoids are a shape — Banno
Eggs are ovoid, and are in the chicken coop or fridge, not in your mind. — Banno
Ovoid is a property of some hidden state which causes your 'ovoid-as-seen' and 'ovoid-as-felt'.
There. What's not clear about that? — Isaac
No. Rather, I've no clear idea what oviod-as-seen might be as distinct from ovoid. — Banno
No. Rather, I've no clear idea what oviod-as-seen might be as distinct from ovoid. — Banno
So the egg is not ovoid? What could "mistaken" mean here? — Banno
It is easier to think of a thing no longer being red when the light goes out than to think of it no longer being ovoid. — Banno
Again, it pays to consider a wide range of examples. I think your argument here has complications caused by colour being a secondary quality. Try making the same point with a primary quality instead - does it still work?
SO the eggs might be rendered something like:
"Some object is an ovoid if it causes most humans to see an ovoid ..."
Is that something you wish to assert? Because it seems to me to be wrong. — Banno
We need an explanation for this extraordinary consistency — Isaac
With colour, some people do claim to see blue where others see red, so that's default reason to believe that colour is the sort of property which can be of two kinds at the same time. — Isaac
Why can a dress not be two different colours at the same time? — Isaac
I'm asking about dresses which are both all red and all blue — Isaac



So you keep saying, but you've not given any account of why a dress cannot be both a red dress and a blue dress. — Isaac
Right. But how does that make it that the dress must be one or the other? — Isaac
But why can't a dress be two different colours at the same time? — Isaac
I don't agree with your analysis of Roe or Casey in terms of the Court ever having considered the rights of the fetus. — Hanover
Consider, though, the other argument, from Justice Scalia in Toxel v. Granville (2002): — Hanover
Why not? — Isaac
Why not? I don't understand why you're invoking this rule that a hidden state has to have the same effect on all people at all times. Where does that rule come from? — Isaac
Why? Why must the property of the external state we're labelling as 'green' be such that it causes the same response in all people at all times? — Isaac
Then when I say "I'll meet you by the postbox" I'm expecting you to get into my mind and wait next to my mental representation? — Isaac
The grammar could not be more clear. — Isaac
Blue being the name given to the property we're seeing. The property of the external hidden state. — Isaac
But we clearly aren't referring to the properties of the experience. When I say "the post box is red" I'm clearly referring to the post box. The grammar could not be more clear. — Isaac
Same hidden state causes one person to respond in the way we call 'seeing blue' and another person to respond in the way we call 'seeing red'. — Isaac
One has green as a property of some mental representation, the other as a property of the hidden state.
The former is without warrant. — Isaac

The colour of hidden state X. — Isaac
No. Same hidden states. I don't understand why you're having so much trouble with the idea of a hidden state having a different effect on different people or in different contexts. — Isaac
The properties of hidden states. — Isaac
Why not? — Isaac
Then how did we learn to use the words? If they describe private experiences, how is it ever learnt their use. — Isaac
How do we even know that what I call 'black' today is the same thing I called 'black' yesterday? — Isaac
There's no reason at all to consider the existence of red2. — Isaac
