hypericin
What I mean is, why is the form it's in not the form that it can most easily process and act upon? — Patterner
hypericin
If the private-symbol model requires “lockstep drifting qualia” just to keep meaning afloat, then abandon the model. Meaning doesn’t live there anyway. — Banno
On the presumption that there is such a thing as "the correct subjective smell", which is the very point at issue. — Banno
Patterner
IYou specifically said "...an illusion of language and introspection" and "What is spoken of as "the sensation of red" is not a thing at all, so much as the illusion of a thing.". But fine, let's not talk of illusion.But people do experience colours. The problem is that some folk want now to talk about ineffable private experiences of colour, instead of yellow. — Banno
Banno
Drifting qualia is your idea, not mine. I — hypericin
No, I suggested that the smell might be another description of the chemical. Not unlike the way you suggest the smell is a different symbol for the chemical.You identify the smell as just another version of the chemical. — hypericin
Banno
But we have colour tables that allow us to do just that at the paint shop.It is a subjective experience in that we cannot quantify the experience, or transfer the knowledge of it to someone else. — Patterner
...and this makes no difference. The qual - the private experiences - do not have a place at the paint shop.we cannot know that what you experience as red is the same as what I experience as red — Patterner
hypericin
Your qual change over time but you do not notice, yet the language game continues unchanged. Therefore the qual are irrelevant to the language game. — Banno
Banno
Always get rid of the idea of the private object in this way: assume that it constantly changes, but that you do not notice the change because your memory constantly deceives you. — Wittgenstein, Philosophical investigations, Anscombe translation p. 207
Banno
But the fact is, we do make use of them. — hypericin
hypericin
Where do we make use of qualia - outside of philosophy fora? — Banno
Banno
So you "have" a qual, and you run down a table of qualia and match it to the qual you previously identified as "coffee".For instance, I make use of qualia when I identify the smell of coffee. If I didn't recognize that particular subjective olfactory experience as coffee, I couldn't make the identification. That there is coffee in the air is revealed to me by the quale of coffee aroma. — hypericin
hypericin
So you have a qual, and you run down a table of qualia and match it to the qual you previously identified as "coffee". — Banno
I just smell coffee. — Banno
Suppose that your qual for coffee changes over time, and your table of qualia also changes to match. You still run down the table to identify the smell, but it is a completely different smell.
What role did your qual play here? — Banno
Qualia are supposed to explain how we recognize things, but the recognition depends on stability, which qualia, as momentary sensations, cannot guarantee. — Banno
Banno
it is unlikely that there is a table of any sort in your brain. More likely that there are neural paths that activate when there is coffee in the air.Perhaps this suffices to describe what my brain does. I'm not generally aware, unless I'm struggling to identify an odor. — hypericin
Yep. But the qual plays no role. You want an explanation that goes odour→qual→table →coffee when one that goes odour→coffee will suffice.The qualia I experience still matches my "table", even in the implausible scenario both are drifting. — hypericin
Suppose that everyone had a box with something in it which we call a “beetle”. No one can ever look into anyone else’s box, and everyone says he knows what a beetle is only by looking at his beetle. Here it would be quite possible for everyone to have something different in his box. One might even imagine such a thing constantly changing. But what if these people’s word “beetle” had a use nonetheless? If so, it would not be as the name of a thing. The thing in the box doesn’t belong to the language-game at all; not even as a Something: for the box might even be empty. a No, one can ‘divide through’ by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is. — §293
Yep. Same for smell, which unlike a qual has temporal continuity. That is, your qualia become smells in order to be of any use.While qualia themselves are momentary, the cognitive machinery which produces them must be stable enough to allow for recognition through time. — hypericin
hypericin
it is unlikely that there is a table of any sort in your brain. More likely that there are neural paths that activate when there is coffee in the air. — Banno
Yep. But the qual plays no role. You want an explanation that goes odour→qual→table →coffee when one that goes odour→coffee will suffice. — Banno
Yep. Same for smell, which unlike a qual has temporal continuity. That is, your qualia become smells in order to be of any use. — Banno
Suppose that everyone had a box with something in it which we call a “beetle”. No one can ever look into anyone else’s box, and everyone says he knows what a beetle is only by looking at his beetle. Here it would be quite possible for everyone to have something different in his box. One might even imagine such a thing constantly changing. But what if these people’s word “beetle” had a use nonetheless? If so, it would not be as the name of a thing. The thing in the box doesn’t belong to the language-game at all; not even as a Something: for the box might even be empty. a No, one can ‘divide through’ by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is. — §293
Banno
Sorry, but the gap is far too great. — hypericin
...and that's the very question I asked, way, way back. If qual are just smells and colours, why bother? Why not just talk about smells and colours?What is a smell if not a quale? — hypericin
Banno
I still don't know how the"game" functions without the "beetle" — hypericin
Specifically, how you are able to accurately utter "l smell coffee" without the involvement of qualia. — hypericin
Patterner
It makes no difference in the paint shop. If that is your only concern, then you're good.we cannot know that what you experience as red is the same as what I experience as red
— Patterner
...and this makes no difference. The qual - the private experiences - do not have a place at the paint shop. — Banno
Patterner
Banno
And yet, keeping with the paint store for an example, we have no idea how we experience redness. We know about photons of certain wavelengths, the retina, cones, optic nerve, neurons in the brain, and more other things than I can guess. But we have no idea why all of that physical activity is accompanied by our experience of redness. No idea how to even beginning looking for the answer. — Patterner
Patterner
I guess I'm wondering about the timeline. Were the brain's ability to do the work so that the conscious subset could interpret the signals and the conscious subset always both present? Or came into being at the same time?What I mean is, why is the form it's in not the form that it can most easily process and act upon?
— Patterner
As the brain receives a sensory signal, it is just a signal, presumably without any qualitative content. The brain has to do the work so that the signal can be interpreted by (the conscious subset of) itself as qualitative.
The key insight is that the sensory manifold we experience is not accidental or epiphenomenal. It is a highly efficient way of organizing information that would otherwise overwhelm the nervous system. — hypericin
Patterner
I think if someone was going to strip away your qualia, you would object. Probably strenuously. You are going to the paint store for some specific color, or deliberating once you get there. I'm sure there's a color that is best, on the whole, for vision. Is every wall, ceiling, and floor in your home is that color? Sunsets and the Grand Canyon serve absolutely no purpose for humans. still, people go crazy for them.Sure, all that. But how do qualia help here? I think that they are a red herring...
And I think I've made a good fist of showing that they are not well understood. — Banno
hypericin
If you want phenomenology, there is no gap between my smelling that and my smelling coffee. That's the point. What there might be is a gap between my smelling coffee and my choosing the word "coffee" for what I smell. — Banno
...and that's the very question I asked, way, way back. If qual are just smells and colours, why bother? Why not just talk about smells and colours? — Banno
no one can look inside the box. — Banno
Banno
This is demonstrably untrue. It doesn't allow for the common case where you smell something but cannot recall what it is. — hypericin
there is no gap between my smelling that and my smelling coffee. That's the point. What there might be is a gap between my smelling coffee and my choosing the word "coffee" for what I smell. — Banno
All three, depending on which account of qualia is under consideration.So are qualia redundant? Incoherent? Or non-existent? Which is it, you have claimed each of these at various times. — hypericin
Then is it anything other than what is commonly called a "sensation"? If not, let us use that term rather than invent a new one. It will suffice.Qualia is a generic term for the individual, subjective experience of smells and colors, and anything else we experience. — hypericin
It is clear in the text that the owner can look inside the box. It might help if you studied what you a e attempting to critique.This does not respect the structure of qualia. The owner of the box may look inside, but no one else. — hypericin
hypericin
Look again, with care. That is precisely what it does allow for - the smell is recognised, but the matching word is not: — Banno
Then is it anything other than what is commonly called a "sensation"? If not, let us use that term rather than invent a new one. It will suffice. — Banno
It is clear in the text that the owner can look inside the box. — Banno
no one can look inside the box. — Banno
Banno
A trivial distinction. To not recognise the smell is to not be able to place it, especially in terms of language.No, forgetting the word is a different case. I'm talking about the case where the smell is not recognized. — hypericin
It's unclear to me what this is claiming. Are you now saying that anger and imaginings are also qualia? Odd. Perhaps the next question is, what for you isn't a quale?"Sensation " is not good enough. It is almost completely specialized to bodily feelings. "Red sensation", "oboe sensation", "angry sensation", "imagining a green sensation". are awkwardly disconnected from established usage. — hypericin
Read Philosophical Investigations again.no one can look inside the box. — Banno
hypericin
A trivial distinction. To not recognise the smell is to not be able to place it, especially in terms of language. — Banno
It's unclear to me what this is claiming. Are you now saying that anger and imaginings are also qualia? Odd. Perhaps the next question is, what for you isn't a quale? — Banno
Banno
You seem very confident about that. Fine. To me they are instances of the same sort of thing, and distinct from the sensation of that aroma. On the one hand is the sensation, on the other it's recognition. Go back to where this line of thought originated:Not recognizing something and forgetting the word for something are entirely different. — hypericin
When someone smells coffee, it's coffee that I smell, recognised or not.But the quale plays no role. You want an explanation that goes odour→qual→table →coffee when one that goes odour→coffee will suffice. — Banno
What a grand vision! Compounding error with illusion. Rhetoric dressed as precision. The raw sensation by itself doesn’t explain why you identify it as "coffee." Therefore, "qualia" does no explanatory work in the theory of perception or cognition. It’s a label, not a mechanism.Yes. This is really standard, and it is odd to me that you have read papers on qualia, hosted topics on qualia, opine frequently on qualia, without even knowing that. Qualia applies to anything that has a felt, subjective character. "Qualia" specifically picks out only that felt, subjective character, discarding everything else. There is no suitable word that can be used in it's place. — hypericin
Patterner
Tell me you would not object to living with no color.I think if someone was going to strip away your qualia...
— Patterner
Oddly irrelevant. — Banno
Those things are qualia. The physical is the body's interactions with the environment, which causes various electrical signals to go from various parts of our exterior to our brain, where they are compared with stored information from previous exposures, etc. Talk about that all you want, and it will never hint at sensations, colours, odours and sounds.It remains for advocates of qualia to explain what qualia add to the conversation that is not already found in our talk of sensations, colours, odours and sounds. — Banno
Banno
Tell me you would not object to living with no color. — Patterner
Then qualia do not act as advertised; they are not private and ineffable. You have defended qualia to such an extent that they are no longer qualia. They are just colours and smells.Those things are qualia. — Patterner
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