Sure you’re not thinking of Voltaire? — Wayfarer
As often I have no idea what you’re on about, but please don’t try to explain, it will probably only confuse things further. — Wayfarer
Aristotle's ontology was better than that! He recognised that animals possess attributes which mere matter does not, even if he also acknowledged that they lack reason. — Wayfarer
Perhaps we could all become Jains — Wayfarer
Well talking to orchids sure is preferable to torturing dogs, I’ll give you that. — Wayfarer
Well talking to orchids sure is preferable to torturing dogs, I’ll give you that. — Wayfarer
.And so we must eat in silence.
That sounds interesting, but I don't think we need scientific experiments to confirm the dualistic nature of human thought; all we need to do is look at language.and its formalization in propositional logic.The dualistic nature of human thought says nothing about the nature of reality in my view. — Janus
Right, but I don't think he is denying that we see red or experience pain. He is rejecting qualia which, as he says, an additional 'thing': is the redness of red, the painfulness of pain; these are reifications of post hoc conceptualizations, not something we experience. We experience red and pain, not the redness of red or the painfulness of pain. — Janus
Do you think most people think of consciousness in these qualia-type terms? Even if you think they do, do you think they experience consciousness this way or just unreflectively think of it this way? Also Dennett is quite clear that he is rejecting the folk-conception of consciousness, which is naive in a very similar way that naive realism is naive. You could even call it naive realism about consciousness, where that which is reified is not objects of the senses but qualities of experience. — Janus
I think the main reason people reject Dennett's philosophy is that they think it rules out spirituality, meaning personal transformation and altered (non-dual) states of consciousness, but I don't see why that would necessarily be the case at all. — Janus
…..a lot more to be discovered. — Wayfarer
f it is right to judge the morality of a philosopher writing 400 years ago by today's standards, — RussellA
This raises the question whether veganism should be promoted today if in a possible future world the eating of plants is considered by society to be morally reprehensible. — RussellA
How about by the constant standards of cultures that understood the evident kinship of humans and other animals long before gentlemen in stiff collars cerebrated that radical idea? — Vera Mont
As Descartes's philosophical starting point was to consider everything a matter of doubt, we should perhaps start by doubting unsubstantiated stories about the man himself. — RussellA
and Richard Watson, the author of the article, seems to have some pretty thorough background work, to go by the bibliography.In his physiological studies, he dissected animal bodies to show how their parts move. He argued that, because animals have no souls, they do not think or feel; thus, vivisection, which Descartes practiced, is permitted.
Where do they come from? — Vera Mont
As vivisection is still legal, can we attack Descartes for a practice that is still carried out today. — RussellA
Before cancelling Descartes and tearing down his statues, I think first the truth should be discovered regarding his position on animal testing. — RussellA
If people want to feel morally righteous with people that lived 400 years ago, that tells you something about them. — Manuel
In the article Descartes on Animals in the Philosophical Quarterly, Peter Harrison argues that the view that Descartes denied feelings to animals is mistaken. — RussellA
Before cancelling Descartes and tearing down his statues... — RussellA
and alsoI'm not someone who wants to tear down statues of famous people connected to the slave trade, for instance.... — Wayfarer
I have respect for Descartes - certainly I don’t want to ‘cancel’ him! — Wayfarer
This sounds to me as word play. The red thing or pain and the speaking about the "redness" or the "pain-ness" is simply to highlight the quality we see or feel. If I say "look at how beautiful the ocean looks
today" - I'm highlighting the various aspects of the ocean, which includes blue-ness. But if you want another term, then I'm happy to say blue. — Manuel
I don't think the naive argument works so well with experience as it does with naive realism in terms of how the world is.
I think the way we experience consciousness is the way it is. However, if you want to find out how the brain produces this property, you can do neuroscience of psychology of perception. Doesn't alter at all our experience in the least. — Manuel
I mean, if you were correct, there would not be SO many articles arguing against Dennett's view, including Searle, Block, Zahavi, Tallis, etc., etc.
So either he is being deliberately tricky or he can't explain his views well. He explains his views well, so I think he's being tricky. — Manuel
So you think we experience redness in addition to red or painfulness in addition to pain? The point I'm making is that Dennett doesn't deny that we experience red or pain; I think he's arguing against the reification of those experiences as redness or painfulness, causing us to imagine something additional to the experience of red or of pain. — Janus
Naive experientialism says there is an inner world of qualia, which is a reification of the concept of felt qualities of experienced visual and tactile impressions. I don't see much difference between the two reifications: one "outer" and one "inner" — Janus
Of course, I'm not going to say that there is something red-like on top of the colour red, that statement has no meaning. — Manuel
That's not how my intuition of experience feels at all. I don't think of an inner world of qualia, I think of objects having colours. — Manuel
I'm sure people who torture animals have Descartes in mind, and his conception of body too. — Manuel
“[My] view is not so much cruel to beasts but respectful to human beings… whom it absolves from any suspicion of crime whenever they kill or eat animals” (reprinted in Penguin Classics’ edition of Mediations and Other Metaphysical Writings,
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