Why would similar brain structuring mean it provides a first-person experience but with different qualia? — Harry Hindu
Qualia is first person, but I prefer to talk in terms of color, sound, etc. — Marchesk
Doesn't the theory of evolution by natural selection show us that are brain structures evolved from previous brain structures like the kind that the bat has?Because we don't brain structures for sonar perception. — Marchesk
But what the bat experiences something else that isnt color or sound when using sonar? — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that you are being inconsistent in your assumptions. You already assumed that the bat has first person experiences and experiences colors and sounds, but then you want to question whether the bat experience is the world similarly to humans? — Harry Hindu
Doesn't the theory of evolution by natural selection show us that are brain structures evolved from previous brain structures like the kind that that has. — Harry Hindu
Then the purpose is to understand the nature of conscious experience. Unfortunately philosophy doesn't have a very good track record when it comes to solving difficult problems. That is the domain of science. Philosophers can keep asking questions until we are blue in the face, but we have to wait for science to catch up to the questions philosophy asks, or at least determines that they are incoherent questions.Useful? Purpose?
This is a philosophical discussion about the nature of conscious experience. It's not about whether being able to know sonar experiences would be useful. — Marchesk
Exactly. That's why we should be using the term, "qualia" since we don't know that the bat has experiences of color or sound.But what the bat experiences something else that isnt color or sound when using sonar?
— Harry Hindu
That's the point. — Marchesk
I really don't see how questions like this help us get at the nature of conscious experience.What's it feel like to have 8 tentacles with suckers? — Marchesk
nfortunately philosophy doesn't have a very good track record when it comes to solving difficult problems. That is the domain of science — Harry Hindu
Exactly. That's the why we should be using the term, "qualia" since we don't know that the bat has experiences of color or sound. — Harry Hindu
I really don't see how questions like this help us get at the nature of conscious experience. — Harry Hindu
They're just questions to me. It doesn't matter whether they are philosophical or not. They are all eventually solved by science, and philosophy should keep up with science in order to stay valid. In other words, they both one and the same and should be working together, not separately.If science can solve such questions, sure. Until then, they remain philosophical. — Marchesk
What is controversial about "qualia" but not about "color"?I try to avoid qualia because it has controversial properties, and will be used by critics to dismiss the argument. — Marchesk
Well, this is a philosophy discussion, as people like to point out, so discuss how it is useful to you.That it's subjective — Marchesk
What is the brain structure for first person experience to say that both the human and bat have it?Because we don't brain structures for sonar perception. — Marchesk
They are all eventually solved by science, — Harry Hindu
In other words, they both one and the same and should be working together, not separately. — Harry Hindu
What is the brain structure for first person experience? — Harry Hindu
I'm willing to grant, at least for the sake of argument, that the bogey in question does act exactly like a human, according to genuine human observers. Along these lines, my point is basically a rehearsal of the physicalist's maxim: No difference without a physical difference. If it acts just the same, and it's made just the same, then it is just the same, and would be conscious like the genuine article -- would be an instance of the genuine article, and no zombie at all. The fact that we -- with our poor knowledge of the relevant empirical facts -- can imagine things otherwise seems no help at all in this matter.Nor am I. A p-zombie could not act exactly like a conscious human being because it is by definition not conscious. Even if consciousness were an illusion, we act in many of the ways we do, and say many of the things we do, because we think of ourselves as being conscious, and the p-zombie could not have such a self-reflexive self-understanding. — Janus
They are all eventually solved by science, — Harry Hindu
No. My statement is based upon the fact that science has a better track record at solving difficult problems than any other method of investigating reality.You're a time traveller? — Marchesk
You seem to think that every philosophical question ever asked is coherent enough for, or worthy of, an explanation at all.So philosophy should just be science? But philosophy asks broader questions and questions that science doesn't know how to address. Some questions like how to live are not scientific questions. — Marchesk
Then maybe the entire brain and the rest of the nervous system works together to create the first person experience - which supplies that extended feeling of being in a body with tactile sensations extending from the head where the brain is. In a sense, your mind is what it is like to be your nervous system.My guess would be those structures that handle sensory data and integrate them into a perception in addition to the ones for memory, imagination, dreams, thoughts and any kind of experience. There's likely a lot of overlap there. — Marchesk
If comparing the similarities between animal brains and human brains and their structures is an indication that these brains share the qualities of subjectivity then why would we not also assume that these same brains experience subjectivity the same way with the same qualia? Why would similar brain structuring mean it provides a first-person experience but with different qualia? — Harry Hindu
What would be the difference between an illusion of consciousness and consciousness, or an illusion of an experience of color, etc. and just an experience of color?
It's not at all clear what the heck the distinction would be. — Terrapin Station
Okay, but again, in the "what does that have to do with" department, what does that have to do with saying that consciousness is an illusion, with denying qualia, with denying the incorrigibility of subjective experience qua subjective experience, etc.? — Terrapin Station
Lets just think about the Redness of the color Red. If you are Experiencing Redness or if you are having an Illusion of Redness, it is still Redness that you are Experiencing. The Illusion still gives you an Experience of Redness. — SteveKlinko
The question is: What is that Redness in the first place regardless of if you want to call it an Illusion or not. — SteveKlinko
but these properties are so unlike the properties traditionally imputed to consciousness — Forgottenticket
but it's not clear just what the view is that he's denying — Terrapin Station
The experiments are less about illusion and more supposed to show the defenders of qualia are failing to meet that definition. — Forgottenticket
Yes, but Dennett has other arguments where it becomes clear he is arguing that consciousness is an illusion. — Marchesk
The closest to definition he comes is here which he describes as fourfold.
"Qualia are: "(1) ineffable (2) intrinsic (3) private (4) directly or immediately apprehensible in consciousness"
The experiments are less about illusion and more supposed to show the defenders of qualia are failing to meet that definition. — Forgottenticket
When he says illusion in recent years, he literally user illusion. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_illusion — Forgottenticket
To suggest, as Dennett seems to, that the apparently sensory
aspects of phenomenology (say) are in some sense illusory because they aren’t the product
of sensory mechanisms in the way we suppose, — luckswallowsall
that it seems as if one is having a phenomenally rich experience of (in his example) green-golden sunlight, Vivaldi violins, and so on. And if there is this seeming, then, once again, there just is phenomenology. — Galen Strawson
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