The Great Whatever
TheWillowOfDarkness
Deleteduserrc
The Great Whatever
Michael
The Great Whatever
But some philosophers claim that if something is physiologically and behaviourally identical to conscious people then ipso facto it is conscious. — Michael
they're claiming that the notion of p-zombies doesn't make sense. — Michael
Michael
The Great Whatever
P-zombies lack consciousness. Only if consciousness is to be understood as qualia would a lack of qualia mean a lack of consciousness. But some, e.g. Dennett, claim that this isn't the case. — Michael
Michael
The Great Whatever
Michael
Michael
The Great Whatever
Michael
The Great Whatever
Just take them at their word. — Michael
_db
The Great Whatever
So of course if you define p-zombies in such a way that it means they lack any and all qualia — darthbarracuda
_db
Aren't p-zombies just people with no qualia? — The Great Whatever
_db
unenlightened
Hogrider
I'm coming to this thread rather late, but it intrigues me as to why TGW thinks that consciousness must be defined in terms of qualia. I wonder whether he has an argument to support that contention? I'm also wondering what TGW's descriptive account of qualia is. — John
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.