It “explains” why my socks and bubblegum are conscious, even though no one thought they were, but it doesn’t explain why the human brain is conscious the way the human brain is conscious, which is what we actually want to know. To put it mildly, panpsychism is irrelevant and pointless. — Zelebg
Do you have a point you want to make using the case of such reflex action?
If we stick to its principles, we are forced to conclude that everything has some sort of experience caused by interaction with environment.
To put it mildly, panpsychism is irrelevant and pointless. — Zelebg
Also, 'Mary's Room' thought experiment demonstrates the existence of qualia almost perfectly. The thought experiment is described in the entry. So I do recommend reading it
It “explains” why my socks and bubblegum are conscious, even though no one thought they were, but it doesn’t explain why the human brain is conscious the way the human brain is conscious, which is what we actually want to know. To put it mildly, panpsychism is irrelevant and pointless. — Zelebg
It [panpsychism] “explains” why my socks and bubblegum are conscious, even though no one thought they were, but it doesn’t explain why the human brain is conscious the way the human brain is conscious, which is what we actually want to know. — Zelebg
Yes, but those philosophical presuppositions are entirely justified while the presuppositions required for the correction of qualia before it becomes conscious have been widely abandoned — StarsFromMemory
There isn't a clear distinction between mentally flipping their perception and flipping their body movements to compensate for their flipped perception: — Pfhorrest
To justify this, the author presents two possibilities based on the following argument — StarsFromMemory
The key point here is that both the possibility are derived assuming 'Cartesian theater theory' because the narrator assumes the following sequence of events : — StarsFromMemory
Hence, both the possibility the author derives rests on a widely criticized philosophical presupposition. If the Cartesian theatre theory is not true, then the possibility of qualia correction does not even arise and hence qualia inversion must follow. (if sensations don't accumulate in one place to be processed) — StarsFromMemory
There should be a distinction. One would mean changing perception to ensure no change in behaviour is required, and the other would be changing behaviour to ensure no change in perception is required.
However, I think what you meant was, that we cannot empirically know which one it is. — StarsFromMemory
Would the function of pain in an organism for whom survival is not of prime importance be vastly different than the function of pain is us? — StarsFromMemory
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