The most radical implication of the new affective turn is that what has been considered unique to conscious subjects, the feeling of what it is like to be, the qualitative experience of the world, is implied in all of what we call physical processes, not as one thing added on, but intrinsic to them.
The most radical implication of the new affective turn is that what has been considered unique to conscious subjects, the feeling of what it is like to be, the qualitative experience e of the world, is implied in all of what we call physical processes — Joshs
It seems to me that all you need to interpret anything is information (the relationship between cause and effect) and a goal, both of which computers have and they interpret data.Implied? Do you think there is an equation that might describe that, such that, given the equation, and the requisite starting parameters, an output could be generated that would equal 'a feeling'? Whenever anything is interpreted, then you're already outside the domain of the strictly physical. Interpretive processes always entail qualitative judgements, and they're different in kind to quantitative analysis. Or so I would have thought. — Wayfarer
The hard problem, of course, is how to reconcile subjective experience with an objective world of causal
processes. — Joshs
Subjectivity is undeniable, and therefore objective. But we have no access to the objective. Therefore we have no access to the subjective. — unenlightened
The claim is that we have no access to the parts of the objective world that aren't our own subjectivity, so there is no contradiction. — Michael
Well if you don't see a problem with the notion that subjectivity is the only thing that is objective — unenlightened
we have access to the objective — unenlightened
"Humans are animals". — Michael Ossipoff
Incorrect - Missed a qualifier there. — Wayfarer
Experience is of the world, and the distinction between subjectivity and objectivity is unsustainable. — unenlightened
The hard problem, of course, is how to reconcile subjective experience with an objective world of causal processes. — Joshs
You mean I didn't say what kind of animals we are? — Michael Ossipoff
How many qualia can dance on the end of a cigar? — Marchesk
There is a metaphysical view called Russellian monism according to which physics and mathematics only describe relations (including causal relations) but relations cannot exist without "things" that stand in those relations. The "things" are not relations or structures of relations and therefore they are also non-mathematical and indescribable. — litewave
“Physics is mathematical not because we know so much about the physical world, but because we know so little; it is only its mathematical properties that we can discover.” — Bertrand Russell
"You mean I didn't say what kind of animals we are?" — Michael Ossipoff
There's a one-word answer, which is specifically relevant to philosophy. — Wayfarer
The most radical implication of the new affective turn is that what has been considered unique to conscious subjects, the feeling of what it is like to be, the qualatiatice experience e of the world, is implied in all of what we call physical processes, not as one thing added on, but intrinsic to them. This is because in creating the abstractions that are so useful in the physical sciences, we don't recognize that qualitative transformation is intrinsic to, implied by all existents. — Joshs
... swinging the pendulum in the other direction to simply say that all all physical processes have an experience-of-what-it-is-like is to make the same mistake from the opposite side of things... — StreetlightX
You mean I didn't say what kind of animals we are?" — Michael Ossipoff
There's a one-word answer, which is specifically relevant to philosophy.
— Wayfarer
But you're not going to say what it is? — Michael Ossipoff
Of course not all of Reality is knowable, describable, discussable, But it isn't necessary to posit the unknowability and indeterminacy at the metaphysical and physical levels. — Michael Ossipoff
The problem is that only relations are describable, but if there are relations then there must also be objects between which those relations are. Those objects can't be nothing because relations between nothings would be absurd. — litewave
The problem is that only relations are describable — litewave
, but if there are relations then there must also be objects between which those relations are.
[/quote]Those objects can't be nothing because relations between nothings would be absurd.
it is the Greek definition of man as the rational animal. And in this case, it is a difference that really makes a difference. — Wayfarer
I suppose the fact that you don’t recognize the salience of rationality doesn’t really come as a surprise :-) — Wayfarer
Doyou really think rationality characterizes our species? — Michael Ossipoff
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