Which philosophers claim to be p-zombies? — csalisbury
I would like to know which philosophers claim they are p-zombies. — darthbarracuda
Dennett don't think they lack something while others have it - they think that qualitative experience as a whole is a myth. — darthbarracuda
(+ are you not making the same appeal to individual eccentricity by positing the existence of p-zombie types?) — csalisbury
Right, so since this view is obviously false, one hypothesis is that Dennett thinks this because he has no qualitative experiences, so they're incomprehensible to him. — The Great Whatever
Should we think that those who believe in god are somehow structurally different than those who do not? — darthbarracuda
Should we automatically think that those who believe qualia is non-real are p-zombies? Shouldn't we give them the benefit of the doubt? — darthbarracuda
A philosophical zombie wouldn't even be able to comprehend the very concept of qualia. — darthbarracuda
But philosophers claim precisely not to be able to understand it, or that it's fundamentally confused, mistaken, or unintelligible. Aren't you just helping my case? — The Great Whatever
So Dennett isn't plugging his ears and claiming the elephant in the room doesn't exist. He's just claiming that the elephant (simpliciter) isn't an elephant but something else. — darthbarracuda
What's the phenomenon which Dennett interprets one way and qualia-supporters another?
Darth: Subjective, qualitative experiences.
I'm not saying he's plugging his ears. I'm saying maybe he doesn't understand the concept because he has no qualia. — The Great Whatever
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