What would be the difference between an illusion of consciousness and consciousness — Terrapin Station
If we're granting that we have the mental phenomenon of color (so that we can have an "illusion"), then we can't turn around and say that we don't have the mental phenomenon of color. — Terrapin Station
It's even more basic than that. Colour is a real phenomenon by any account and not a merely "mental" phenomenon. — Janus
In a way, you could even say that the illusion theory is just pushing consciousness away one step. What then is experiencing the illusion? — Theologian
If we're granting that we have the mental phenomenon of color (so that we can have an "illusion"), then we can't turn around and say that we don't have the mental phenomenon of color. — Terrapin Station
That's debatable and a minority position called color realism. Wavelengths of light and reflective surfaces are real. Whether either of those could be said to be colored in the way we experience color is controversial. — Marchesk
That's debatable and a minority position called color realism. Wavelengths of light and reflective surfaces are real. Whether either of those could be said to be colored in the way we experience color is controversial. — Marchesk
What does it mean for our brain to fool "us"? Are we not our brain along with the rest of our body? Why would the brain want to fool itself? It seems like an awful lot of energy put into the brain just fooling itself.Consciousness is compared to a magic show, where the brain fools us using some slight of cognition we're not aware of. — Marchesk
It seems to me that the hard problem is the result of dualism - not the other way around.The goal is to dissolve the hard problem without just handwaving it away or giving into some form of dualism. — Marchesk
The sensation of shape and weight are not the shape and weight of the apple, just as the redness and taste are not the ripeness of the apple. They are all effects of the body's interaction with the apple and the light reflecting off of it. Redness is about the ripeness of the apple and the reflected light and your visual system. Any difference in any of those three causes leads to a different effect. Shut the lights off and the apple is black, not red, even though it's ripeness has not changed.When I perceive an apple, I'm not just aware of the apple's color or its taste, I'm also aware of it's shape and weight. Some qualities of human experience are the basis for science. But if color and taste are illusions, what reason would we have for supposing that shape and weight are not? — Marchesk
What is meant by "real" may be debatable, but according to any ordinary definition colour is real and not merely a mental phenomenon, since some at least of the processes which give rise to colour as a phenomenon are physical — Janus
Object would be colour. Illusion would be the mock-up of colour.The "object" would be "the experience of a color," right? — Terrapin Station
This is a good point, but I think they're using illusion in the sense of a magic trick which creates an experience of real magic that's actually smoke and mirrors where the audience is fooled because they can't think of how it's being pulled off. Similarly, our brains are tricking us into thinking we're having these experiences of color, smell, pain, etc. — Marchesk
A sleight of hand is a kind of distraction, not really an illusion. The magician distracts your attention while they do something else where you arent looking. Why and how would the brain distract itself just so it could do something else?Dennett and Frankish use the metaphor of a magic show with slight of hand being used to fool our brains. — Marchesk
Here's a brief article about it:
https://curiosity.com/topics/theres-no-such-thing-as-consciousness-according-to-philosopher-daniel-dennett-curiosity/ — Terrapin Station
Dennet's next metaphor: If our brain is a smartphone, then consciousness is the screen. In other words, consciousness is not how our brain works, it's only how we interface with it. — curiosity.com
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