Qualia aversion is a serious condition that often goes undiagnosed. Symptoms include need for public reassurance and an inability to introspect. — Marchesk
Can an infant have a belief? Can a cat think? — Daemon
Then how should we think about these correlations? — frank
What is there that cannot be characterised as "correlations drawn between things"? — Banno
Belief is correlations drawn between things.
— creativesoul
This statement would be a reflection on your own folk psychology (specifically mind-reading.) — frank
Cats demonstrate purposeful behavior. You're calling this belief. — frank
Whether we want to conflate purposefulness with belief is a decision made at the level of language game, not philosophy. Right? — frank
That is, how do we account for change in things but also have those things maintain their identity through that change? — Andrew M
I'm attempting to provide an adequate evolutionarily amenable account of all conscious experience from non linguistic through metacognitive.
— creativesoul
Interesting. What's your present view of the non-linguistic phase? Those of us inclined to agree with this,
consciousness is the ability to attribute meaning.
— creativesoul
... might assume there wasn't one? — bongo fury
That belief is a propositional attitude is not up for debate. It's just part of the logic of belief. — Banno
While there are all sorts of language less creatures incapable of drawing correlations between different things, those aren't of interest here, for such creatures aren't capable of attributing meaning, and consciousness is the ability to attribute meaning.
— creativesoul
Good. Now we can remove the ghost of anthropomorphism from the dialectic. I just needed assurance, if not actual verification, so....thanks for that. — Mww
I’m not onboard with your rendering of consciousness, but that’s ok.We may return to that after I’ve a better understanding of the intricacies of your account. — Mww
A concrete thing is something that is not predicated of anything else. So the cup and the person are examples of concrete things. Whereas physical contact is a relation between concrete things. Since it's predicated of those concrete things, it is abstract, not concrete.
— Andrew M
Concrete things here seem to be just individuals. It's a cup and a person, not cups and people. — Banno
If it is the case that we are both objects in the world and subjects taking account of it and/or ourselves, then the dichotomy cannot be used as a means to draw a distinction between us and our accounts...
— creativesoul
Us and our accounts are not the dichotomy, they are the same thing, in that the account is contained in us. An account is, after all, merely a judgement, thus the account belongs to that which judges. — Mww
...My body (in the world of things) has arms and legs (objects included in the world of things) is an account I make as a judge of things in the world belonging to my body. My account is not in the world, it is in me as the judge of the relatedness of things. — Mww
The only way to reject the counter-argument favoring the necessary subject/object dualism, is to deny the human cognitive system is inherently a logical system... — Mww
Sidebar: is a language-less creature one that has no language to use, or one that has no use of the language he has? — Mww
using the word differently is equivocating.
— creativesoul
It would be if I were not setting out explicitly how I am using the word. — Banno
I reject the subject/object framework altogether. We are both objects in the world and subjects taking account of it
— creativesoul
How are those two assertions not contradictory?
—————— — Mww
... leads to conflating pre-theoretical language less conscious experience, pre-theoretical linguistically informed conscious experience, and theoretical linguistically informed conscious experience.
— creativesoul
Fair enough, but if the goal is to distinguish "conscious experience" from a non-conscious variety of something or other (experience?), and all three of your sub-categories fall on the positive side of the distinction, what exactly is the point of the proposed sub-division? Ah...
Only the first of the three consists entirely of directly perceptible things.
— creativesoul
Ok, I'm curious to know in what way you aren't offering to help frank here to,
Clean away the strawmen piled in the idea of phenomenal consciousness,
— frank
?
Just interested. — bongo fury
Red cups, apples, and pains in hands are not propositional content.
— creativesoul
Can’t they be subjects or objects of propositions, hence contents of them? Or can propositions not have content? — Mww
They are most certainly always part of the correlational content of belief about them.
— creativesoul
Yes, always, with the caveat that correlational content of belief is not propositional. — Mww
No, your account wants for nothing. It is incoherent, and hence not an account. — Banno
In so far as we ascribed beliefs to cats, we are not treating beliefs as attitudes towards propositions. We are using the word differently. — Banno
The cat can't form an attitude towards a proposition, because it cannot form a proposition. That is, it can't believe it is hungry, but it can be hungry.
Talk of cats having beliefs is at best metaphorical. — Banno
It is pointless to continue a discussion in which it cannot be agreed that some stuff is only between the ears. — Mww
Absolutely. And you’re the only current participant that even attempts an exposition of some form of the discipline, even if it’s your own personal creation. I’m down with the attempting the discipline, but promise nothing regarding the practice of it. — Mww
Because that's how it is!
— creativesoul
Nonsense. Unless you can taste wavefunctions and see X-Rays.
I bet you can't even do sonar! — Marchesk
Nowadays folks tend to think what we perceive is just the way things really are.
— Mww
Anyone who does that is truly naive, both philosophically and scientifically. One might be a direct realist, but it does take more work than just "things are exactly as they look". Or at least I hope they bother to do the work.
Because if not, their lack of philosophical rigor will be called out. Lazy bastards! — Marchesk
Are you asking me to justify my asserting what the content of the cat's conscious experience is?
— creativesoul
Apparently, the content is that which exists in its entirety, and so far, that’s the extent of the assertion. Maybe not asking so much the justification for asserting content, but asking instead, what the something’s content actually is. — Mww
And even if the something’s content is some ubiquitous or pervasive correlation, I still have no more understanding of that, than I had with understanding merely the ambiguous something.
seems to hold a position very similar(the most similar, I think) to my own. — creativesoul
Cats do not have belief.
— creativesoul
Indeed. — Banno
conflating perception with reality stigma
— creativesoul
You lost me. Nobody’s a Kantian because that’s what they do, or that’s what he did? — Mww
They can't. But they can have an attitude towards their food. — Banno