noAxioms
Alright, since you've been using 'consciousness', are you saying that you cannot detect your own consciousness? That it has no physical effect?Do you equate mental and consciousness? — Patterner
Oh really. Vapor pressure is not a property of boiling? Light absorption spectrum is not a property of photosynthesis? Sorting efficiency is not a property of a sort process? Bias not a property of decision making?In terms of ontology, things have properties, processes do not have properties. — Relativist
That's right. It simulates current for the purpose of learning what real current will do to the real circuit. I never said the simulation was the same thing as the actual chip. Just that it has all the same relevant properties, so one can learn all you need to know about the real chip behavior without actually making one.You are missing the point. It simulates the current. But there is no current, just numerical values representing current. — hypericin
Disagree with this one. Computation is used, sure, but most often the purpose is not to reproduce computational features. They simulate the weather a lot, but not the computational features of the weather at all.Simulation: reproduces computational features
OKImitation: reproduces behavioral features
You're thinking like a model ship or something, not a model of physics, the latter of which does not reproduce physical features. The λCDM model is an example of the latter.Model: reproduces (some) physical features
Yea, which makes it a nice test, no?And so, Does the simulated guy have qualia? It would seem this can only be true if qualia were computational.
Well, you ask the guy if his qualia is still there. If you go with the zombie argument, then qualia is epiphenomenal and the zombie is lying when he makes up stories about it. I don't seem to understand how that argument helped Chalmers' case since the zombie behaving identically without the qualia is either inconceivable or an assertion of epiphenomenal, which is identical to fiction.And if so, you can't build a qualia detector
Banno
Lewis asks us to imagine there are two gods, one who lives on the tallest mountain and one who lives on the coldest. One is angry and hurls thunderbolts on the people below, the other generous and showers mana. Each is omniscient in a distinctive way: they know which non-indexical sentences are true.6 For example, they each know the truth-value of "The generous god lives on the tallest mountain", "there are two gods", and "one god throws thunderbolts". The question is: can either deduce the truth-values of any indexical sentences?
Lewis’ remarks suggest not. Moreover, there are general theoretical reasons to think this, namely: the truth-values of indexical sentences vary with who the god is (and more generally with the context); I am the angry god is true for one god, false for the other. The coldest mountain is here is false in one god’s
context but true in the other’s. If either indexical sentence followed from the non-indexical premises available to both gods, it would be a logical consequence of true premises, and so true itself—no matter what the context was. So neither can be entailed by the premises. — Gillian Russell
hypericin
Disagree with this one. Computation is used, sure, but most often the purpose is not to reproduce computational features. They simulate the weather a lot, but not the computational features of the weather at all. — noAxioms
Right. Just trying to make my little taxonomy more complete.You're thinking like a model ship or something, not a model of physics, the latter of which does not reproduce physical features. — noAxioms
Well, you ask the guy if his qualia is still there. I — noAxioms
he zombie behaving identically without the qualia is either inconceivable or an assertion of epiphenomenal, which is identical to fiction. — noAxioms
Patterner
Well, twice, anyway. and I haven't answered it because I've been trying to make you understand what I actually said. But first I'll answer, and then I'll try to make you understand.Alright, since you've been using 'consciousness', are you saying that you cannot detect your own consciousness? That it has no physical effect?
Funny that you're straight up refused to answer a question asked so many times now. — noAxioms
the world is opened up, made meaningful, or disclosed through consciousness. The world is inconceivable apart from consciousness. — Routledge Intro to Phenomenology
Everything begins with consciousness, and nothing is worth anything except through it. — Albert Camus
Relativist
No. It's a property of the material. I'm referring to the intrinsic properties of existents. Everything that exists has intrinsic properties.Vapor pressure is not a property of boiling? — noAxioms
Clarity on ontology.Unclear what you might hope to accomplish by taking this stance. — noAxioms
noAxioms
OK, It seems pretty obvious that indexical truth does not follow from non-indexical truth. Not sure how to apply that here. For one, most indexical statements come with an implied context, allowing a reasonable assessment of truth. Secondly, I'm not sure if the first/third person dichotomy is an index/non-index kind of division, mostly because yes, context is almost always implied, and almost any statement is indexical, such as 'noAxioms lives to his 55th birthday'. The context there is subtle and often missed, but it's there.There is a piece of information each god lacks, of a different kind from ordinary propositional/worldly information. It is contextual or self-locating information. — Banno
OK. Don't think I've ever see the word used that way. States correspond to data, and data does not compute, the engine does. It is unclear if in reality there is an engine involved in the evolution from one state to the next. This would be the 'breathing of fire into the equations' that Hawlking spoke of. A simulation is typically a presentist model, whereas reality probably isn't. It's the presence/absence of that fire that is the difference.I mean 'computational' in the broad scene, where one state of a weather system physically "computes" the next. — hypericin
A simulation is typically classical, and the universe is not, so a computer cannot simulate reality. I see no evidence for instance that 1) there is state at all (counterfactuals), and 2) that any of the values (the velocity of the moon relative to Earth say) is discreet, meaning it is impossible to express a typical real number. The set of numbers available to a (infinite capacity) computer is countably infinite, but the reals are not, and I suspect the universe uses reals.And if you think about it, there must be a homology between this physical "computation" and the sort of computation a computer does, otherwise the computer couldn't simulate it.
I reject this fantasy. If my qualia valished abruptly, I would 1) notice, 2) not feel obligated to pretend otherwise as you imply, and 3) probably not even be able to express my distress since qualia is required for a human to do almost any voluntary thing like communicate coherently.But remember, this is a simulated human. Part of a human's behavior is to respond to questions about their qualia as if they had them.
Why? The simulation just makes the chemicals and momentums do their things. It has no high level information that it's a human being simulated. It's just a bounded box with state, suitable for simulating a heap of decaying leaves as much as anything else without any change of code.Answers to the negative would break the simulation.
I did, just then..Can you quote or restate your argument?
First of all, that wording half implies that we can only detect the physical. I do admit that you don't explicitly deny the ability to detect anything non-physical.To try to clarify, let me try it this way:
If what we can detect (the physical) cannot explain something (consciousness), then we should consider the possibility that there is something we can't detect (the fundamental nature of consciousness). — Patterner
I consider processes to exist as much as the material involved in the process. This all seems a quibble about choice of language application and not about how anything actually works.No. It's a property of the material. I'm referring to the intrinsic properties of existents. Everything that exists has intrinsic properties. — Relativist
Relativist
. My initial statement on the issue said it all:Unclear what you might hope to accomplish by taking this stance. — noAxioms
Beyond that, I was just explaining what I meant.In terms of ontology, things have properties, processes do not have properties. You may have meant it in a de dicto sense. Regardless, we agree consciousness is a process. — Relativist
Banno
OK, It seems pretty obvious that indexical truth does not follow from non-indexical truth. Not sure how to apply that here. For one, most indexical statements come with an implied context, allowing a reasonable assessment of truth. Secondly, I'm not sure if the first/third person dichotomy is an index/non-index kind of division, mostly because yes, context is almost always implied, and almost any statement is indexical, such as 'noAxioms lives to his 55th birthday'. The context there is subtle and often missed, but it's there. — noAxioms
Patterner
I am glad you admit that, because I do not deny the ability to detect anything non-physical. Consciousness is non-physical, yet we detect it. As I said, I think 'detect' is too week a word for this, but it will do.First of all, that wording half implies that we can only detect the physical. I do admit that you don't explicitly deny the ability to detect anything non-physical. — noAxioms
I don't know how I am being inconsistent when I agree with everything you just said. And I have never said otherwise.Secondly, the point I keep making: This fundamental nature of consciousness cannot be undetectable. It may itself be non-physical, but it has to cause physical effects, because you are physically responding to it. That's the part that's self-inconsistent with your suggestion. — noAxioms
It isn't merely the lack of a physicalist explanation. It's the lack of any hint of what a physicalist explanation might look like. The reason for that is because it is trying to build something non-physical out of physical components. That's worse than trying to build a wooden house out of water, because at least wood and water are physical things made out of the same primary particles. if I told you I saw somebody pour a bunch of water on the ground, and suddenly there was a house, you would be skeptical. If you saw it happen yourself, you would still think somebody was pulling a fast one. But building something non-physical out of physical components is unquestionably the answer, despite the fact that many brilliant people have been failing to even get a vague idea of how it might work?Your argument instead hinges on the lack of explanation. Physicalism might indeed not have an full explanation, but neither does your alternative, which lacks even the beginnings of one. So positing something undetectable isn't an improvement. — noAxioms
noAxioms
Relevance noted. Trying to see if it solves anything, especially since the universe is seemingly not composed of true statements.The context is an addition, not found in any third person sentence.
It would seem that first person accounts are indeed not reducible to third person accounts. — Banno
OK. The whole thing came up because you suggested that I consider a process to be a 'thing', and apparently because I consider processes to be eligible for having properties. We have differing opinions on this, and 'thing' isn't precisely defined, so that kind of explains the disconnect.Beyond that, I was just explaining what I meant. — Relativist
That's kind of funny because I read what I said myself and I decided it doesn't follow. The noun there is 'nature', and the nature of this consciousness may be undetectable even if the consciousness itself is. That just means you cannot know how it works, which is true of plenty of physical things, anything with multiple interpretations.This fundamental nature of consciousness cannot be undetectable. — noAxioms
I don't know how I am being inconsistent when I agree with everything you just said. — Patterner
I disagree since it's pretty trival to put environmental awareness, appropriate reaction, and intent into some fairly simple devices. That's at least a hint, better than not only a lack of dualist explanation, but an actual assertion that there isn't ever going to be one. The whole point of the black box is its blackness, the inner working being deliberately hidden, the opposite of investigation of how anything works.It isn't merely the lack of a physicalist explanation. It's the lack of any hint of what a physicalist explanation might look like.
Not much. Works for sea monkeys.if I told you I saw somebody pour a bunch of water on the ground, and suddenly there was a house, you would be skeptical.
Are you dissing dualism here? The brilliant people seem to have a vested interest in not investigating how it works. There very much is data to investigate like how this supposed non-physical stuff is so susceptible to physical damage.But building something non-physical out of physical components is unquestionably the answer, despite the fact that many brilliant people have been failing to even get a vague idea of how it might work?
Nonsense. If it's undetectable, then it should have no reason to be posited (*1). It very much is detected because it's effects are physical and measurable. Thing is, it's slippery stuff and defies being captured in a container.We don't know what dark matter is, and cannot detect it in any way.
But that's how you detect anything. We don't detect the moon directly, but we see what it does. Dark matter is like that, just way less obvious. What they didn't do is suggest the galactic rotation curves are caused by magic. They could have. Perhaps MOND is an attempt at doing so, except it has never worked.But we assume it exists because we can see what it does.
hypericin
I reject this fantasy. If my qualia valished abruptly, I would 1) notice, 2) not feel obligated to pretend otherwise as you imply, and 3) probably not even be able to express my distress since qualia is required for a human to do almost any voluntary thing like communicate coherently. — noAxioms
Answers to the negative would break the simulation.
Why? The simulation just makes the chemicals and momentums do their things. It has no high level information that it's a human being simulated. It's just a bounded box with state, suitable for simulating a heap of decaying leaves as much as anything else without any change of code. — noAxioms
hat any of the values (the velocity of the moon relative to Earth say) is discreet, meaning it is impossible to express a typical real number. — noAxioms
Banno
But hopefully, what one says about the university is....especially since the universe is seemingly not composed of true statements. — noAxioms
Nice. Your sentence is indexical without being in the first-person. There is some tension between the Lewis account and the Anscombe/Wittgenstein account, but also some agreement in that both admit to a context, the one saying it is additional information, the other that it is a role int a language game.How about a statement of the form "The cold mountain is to the left". Is that a third person sentence? It arguably references an unspecified context, but not necessarily a subjective one. — noAxioms
hypericin
An aside - the dependence here is on context, not on subjectivity. It's not that first-person statements are subjective - whatever that might mean - that is at issue, but how we account for the place of the context in first person statements and indexicals.
That's why the guff here about qualia is irrelevant. — Banno
Banno
hypericin
Going over my own notes, I found an admission that I did not understand qualia - from 2012. In 2013, I said I do not think that there is worth in giving a name to the subjective experience of a colour or a smell. In 2014, I doubted the usefulness of differentiating a smell from the experience-of-that-smell. Never understood qualia. I still don't see their purpose. — Banno
Banno
No. I continue to think the qualia are incoherent. In so far as they are private sensations, they are irrelevant, and in so far as they are public, we already have 'red" and "sour" to cover that use.Has your understanding improved in the intervening decade plus? — hypericin
I don't. The logical or public irreducibility of first-person ascriptions is linguistic. Stop trying to explain them by positing private inner objects such as qualia. First-person grammar explains why self-ascriptions behave differently from third-person reports; it does not explain the existence of conscious subjects.How on earth do you get first person perspective from mere grammar? — hypericin
Janus
Yes, the object itself. OK, the topic I linked is more about there being no physical boundary for an object itself — noAxioms
The identity is more a question of: Is this rock the same one it was yesterday? What if I chip a bit off? — noAxioms
I don't think it follows, but the convention typically chosen by anybody is a mind dependent one. There are very few definitions that are not. "Is part of the universe" is heavily mind dependent, especially because of 'the' in there, implying that our universe is special because it's the one we see. — noAxioms
noAxioms
You're right. For instance, I presumed memory is physical. If that's taken away, I will have no memory of that which was taken away, but I also will be completely unable to function since I could not utter a sentence, lacking memory required to remember what I wanted to say and where I was in the utterance, and lacking language knowledge at all.You say you will notice, but this already presumes that you have the capacity to notice. — hypericin
If there was memory of the qualia, then its abrupt absence would be noticed. Whether that causes distress or not depends on if that distress is part of what was taken away. It probably was. Either way, if the simulated entity notices the lights going out and he retains the ability to report things, he'd report it.If the simulation is just state and processing, there will be no distress.
Not if dualism is true. It would be like perfectly simulating a physical radio and expecting it to play music. It just wouldn't because you're missing something that is more than the physical radio, and the simulated radio would have zero access to real radio waves.A faithful simulation of the human brain will, somewhere in its workings, faithfully process all the state associated with a full qualitative experience.
How can qualia be experienced if there isn't any? This all seems contradictory. I've essentially created a p-zombie here, which is identical under physicalism and not identical under dualism (both substance and property). The dualist will thus reject the test on grounds of p-zombies behaving identically, but I've argued how that cannot be. They cannot make up a story about something they cannot know. They're not conceivable without some serious denial of logic.The agent will "experience" it's qualia, and report nothing unusual. There just may not be any actual qualia.
OK. I never said there was. That's what it means to be a simulation. The simulated chip cannot detect if it's real or if it's a simulation. If the simulation is incomplete, then it could detect the difference. For instance, the simulation does not simulate mass, but the chip has no way of testing its own mass. If it did, then it needs to be part of the simulation.In the same way, your chip sim faithfully processes all the state associated with electrical flow. There just isn't any actual electricity.
OK, but under dualism, the zombie simulated would be a human body, not a human.If you show a human an apple and ask them what color they are experiencing, they will say 'red'.
Exactly The simulation is missing a critical component, and would thus not be simulating a human. That's why it makes such a nice falsification test, since it works only if a human body and a human are the same thing.If they do not, something is wrong with the simulation.
Never worked with an analog computer then? I have. Interesting stuff, but hard to simulate anything complicated since they're so limited. No memory, no instructions.Computers can't process infinite precision reals
"The universe is not composed of true statements" is also an indexical and thus lacks an objective truth value. The language usage there is so common that most forget that it's an indexical.especially since the universe is seemingly not composed of true statements. — noAxioms
But hopefully, what one says about the university is.
How about a statement of the form "The cold mountain is to the left". — noAxioms
Nice. Your sentence is indexical without being in the first-person. — Banno
Not being well versed in any of the known philosophers, I don't know how (Wittgenstein presumably) argues for the language game thing, and I see arguments made by language games all the time.There is some tension between the Lewis account and the Anscombe/Wittgenstein account, but also some agreement in that both admit to a context, the one saying it is additional information, the other that it is a role int a language game.
Where it meets the ground is pretty ambiguous. I've a small protrusion of rock in my yard. Does the rock end near the vaguely defined mean ground level? Does it mass a kg or is it a continental plate, even if most of the plate is not the slate that protrudes from my yard? Read the topic if you're interested. One test is: "How big is this?" where 'this' is something pointed to or touched. No actual language is allowed, since the contention is that 'this' is an ideal, defined only by language. Just saying 'rock' gives a huge clue about an ideal instead of the thing in itself.YRocks have physical boundaries―namely where the surface meets the air or water and the ground. — Janus
Of course. Such is the nature of a pragmatic ideal.The boundaries may not be precise on the atomic level, but a boundary does not have to be absolutely precise for us to be able to identify an object.
Just so. Hence identity also being merely an ideal, lacking in objective truth.It all depends on how you frame it―there is no context-independent fact of the matter.
Your statement immediately above seems to suggest otherwise.The objects are not conventions either.
hypericin
In so far as they are private sensations, they are irrelevant — Banno
in so far as they are public, we already have 'red" and "sour" to cover that use — Banno
The logical or public irreducibility of first-person ascriptions is linguistic. Stop trying to explain them by positing private inner objects such as qualia. — Banno
Banno
If qualia are private, then how is it that you and these others agree about them? How do you know that, when you use the term "qualia", you are all talking about the same thing? Especially if:You may think the core feature of conscious experience is irrelevant. Others disagree. — hypericin
How each of our coding systems presents to us is not communicable by language or any other means, as there is no stable referent language can latch onto — hypericin
hypericin
If qualia are private, then how is it that you and these others agree about them? How do you know that, when you use the term "qualia", you are all talking about the same thing? — Banno
Banno
I think it clear that you are relying on a structure that is imposed by our shared language, a structure that is public. We can see the shared language, and that gives us the illusion of a shared private world.We don't know, and can never know, that the content of our qualia agree. What most of us do agree is that there is something that it is like to see an apple and smell ammonia. This structures our experience, and the concept can be communicated with language. While qualitative content can never be. — hypericin
Patterner
I don't know which types of dualism would agree, but the property dualism I have in mind, with consciousness a fundamental property, does not.A faithful simulation of the human brain will, somewhere in its workings, faithfully process all the state associated with a full qualitative experience.
-hypericin
Not if dualism is true. It would be like perfectly simulating a physical radio and expecting it to play music. It just wouldn't because you're missing something that is more than the physical radio, and the simulated radio would have zero access to real radio waves. — noAxioms
Patterner
And that is what needs explanation. It doesn't even matter whether or not what it is like for me to see red is the same as what it is like for you to see red. we need to know why there's something it is like for anybody to see red, as opposed to nothing taking place other than a massively complex bunch of particles bouncing around, with some moving one way because photons of one range of wavelengths hit the retina, and some moving another way because photons of another range of wavelengths hit the retina.If qualia are private, then how is it that you and these others agree about them? How do you know that, when you use the term "qualia", you are all talking about the same thing?
— Banno
We don't know, and can never know, that the content of our qualia agree. What most of us do agree is that there is something that it is like to see an apple and smell ammonia. — hypericin
hypericin
we need to know why there's something it is like for anybody to see red — Patterner
Patterner
hypericin
But why does the brain present what it already understands to itself in a different form? — Patterner
boundless
I'm inclined not to be one of those that rejects Einstein, but that isn't to say that other interpretations (that are inconsistent with all of the above) are wrong. — noAxioms
Perhaps yes on the mathematical truths (arguably not since so many of them depend on unprovable axioms), but definitely not to any sort of concepts, all of which seem to supervene on something more basic. — noAxioms
I just said that such truths are not physical, the opposite of your assertion here. — noAxioms
But there's so many more of the latter, to the point that you are more likely than not to be part of one of them. — noAxioms
How would you respond to somebody who cannot envision such an explanation being possible, especially given the current lack of such an explanation? — noAxioms
I would have said that the new model is closer, but sure, you'll never get all the way to ding an sich. — noAxioms
Same can be said of SR. It demonstrably does not correspond to reality. But it was never an attempt to do so. GR is closer, but just like NM, breaks down at the boundary cases. Doesn't imply that we should teach neither NM nor GR in schools. — noAxioms
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