↪A Raybould
What (if anything) Mary learns from seeing colors is either discursively-learnable or it is not. We can consider these two cases separately.
OK, so this argument puts off the question of accepting whether or not Mary learns anything [my emphasis.] — jkg20
I guess against this argument, the skeptic would have to push the investigation of the supposed distinction between knowledge being discursively learnable and knowledge being physically encodeable. — jkg20
So, a premise of the Churchland/Crane/whoever argument is that there is a distinction between knowledge that is discursively learnable and knowledge, the content of which is entirely encodeable in a physical medium. — jkg20
Content is propositional. Even if one accepts the idea of non conceptual content, that is not to accept the idea that there is content that cannot be expressed in terms of propositions, it is just to accept that the person having the mental state with that content need not have the resources to state those propositions. — jkg20
So if all content is propositional, then not only is all discursively learnable knowledge physically encodeable, all physically encodeable knowledge is expressable as propositions and so is discursively learnable[my emphasis] — jkg20
the Crane/Churchland line seems to force the skeptic to a position in which they will have to defend the following modus tollens:
1 If some item of knowledge is physically encodeable, then it is discursively learnable
2 The item of knowledge Mary gains is not discursively learnable
_________________________
The item of knowledge Mary gains is not physically encodeable — jkg20
You are mistaken. My argument that you are referring to contained the conditional premise that if one accepts that Mary gains knowledge, then there is an obligation to say something substantive about what she gains. Jackson's argument states that Mary gains knowledge. But your misunderstanding on that point is a peripheral issue anyway, since we have now moved on to a different, and more fundamental, disagreement. Let's try a new argument:The claim that Mary learns something from seeing colors is a premise of Jackson's argument, and yours too, if I am not mistaken.
The claim that Mary learns something from seeing colors is a premise of Jackson's argument, and yours too, if I am not mistaken.
You are mistaken. My argument that you are referring to contained the conditional premise that if one accepts that Mary gains knowledge, then there is an obligation to say something substantive about what she gains. Jackson's argument states that Mary gains knowledge. — jkg20
You make it sound as though what preceded this sentence was an argument against premise one of my argument, but it was not. All you do is point out a pretty obvious, iterative distinction between a state and its description. That is not a counterexample to premise 1, nor any kind of reason to reject it. If you want to reject premise 1 you need to do better. Premise 1 seems perfectly in harmony with what you yourself referred to as canonical information theory.Therefore, I do not accept this premise, though I will accept this:
But that does not speak to premise 4 at all, within which there is no mention of knowledge, it is a metaphysical, not epistemological premise. The only epistemological premises of the argument are 6 and 7. Up to premise 4 all the issues are metaphysical. Note that the background assumption of the argument is a realism about information content, of course: i.e. there can be information content that is not the content of any actual mental state. But why would any physicalist object to such a realist assumption?I cannot accept this, either, as only a small amount of all physically-encodable information is the information content of knowledge.
In summary, this argument fails because it equivocates between two different things: on the one hand, knowledge of the physical state encoding the information content of some other item of knowledge, and on the other hand, that other item of knowledge itself.
That is not the distinction I made. Please reread the post.(especially given the distinction you made between 'expressible' and 'can be stated' in your previous post.)
↪A Raybould
(especially given the distinction you made between 'expressible' and 'can be stated' in your previous post.)
That is not the distinction I made. Please reread the post. — jkg20
Therefore, I do not accept this premise, though I will accept this:
You make it sound as though what preceded this sentence was an argument against premise one of my argument, but it was not. All you do is point out a pretty obvious, iterative distinction between a state and its description. — jkg20
Against premise 4 you state:
I cannot accept this, either, as only a small amount of all physically-encodable information is the information content of knowledge.
But that does not speak to premise 4 at all, within which there is no mention of knowledge, it is a metaphysical, not epistemological premise. — jkg20
The SEP is an excellent resource, and in section 2 we have a discussion showing that it is not straightforward to find an inverted spectrum scenario that is clearly behaviorally-invariant (and as we will see, my argument is not defeated by the existence of some scenarios that are.)
— A Raybould
You're confusing your opinion with your argument. The stuff in section 2 is a different argument than what you've presented... — InPitzotl
some of the arguments in that section are in fact decent and relevant, but they do also presume things about color processing for which we really need more detail... Since these are L1 like properties, inverting the mappings from L1 to L2 colors may still carry these properties — InPitzotl
"Too vague" seems to have become your default response, but by itself, it is too... vague?
— A Raybould
It's not exactly a default response so much as it is prompted: — InPitzotl
Are there any non-vague metrics of vagueness, and more-or-less objective thresholds? The falsifiability criterion of science provides one (despite not being directed specifically at vagueness alone), and it is an appropriate one here: Vague claims (such as of vagueness exceeding some unspecified threshold) are not falsifiable.
What I am saying here could be falsified; a (not-yet-achieved) causal model of how the human brain produces a mind would reveal whether, to a first-order approximation, most humans are undergoing the same physical functions when they experience color. That's good enough for a hypothesis. — A Raybould
A more parsimonious expectation, however, is that this multi-generational training has produced brains that function alike, to a first approximation. If they did not, how likely is it that they would have, so to speak, 'learned the lessons' imparted by evolution?
— A Raybould
...in relation to the topic at hand, this is indeed too vague. Your expectation is more parsimonious than what exactly? Function alike in what ways? What "learned lessons"? I'm perfectly happy to say that human brains evolved in human like ways, but that does not really imply same-experience unless you can connect the similarity of human evolution to the similarity of color experience, which I've yet to see. Other than that, it's yet another nature versus nurture debate. Truth is, both nature and nurture make brains, especially human brains. — InPitzotl
My point is based on empirical fact: if variation is routinely producing children that have markedly different functional responses to color stimuli than their parents, then how come we only very rarely see those variations that do not result in observable differences?
— A Raybould
Because, for example, predators aren't examining your brain with fMRI to see if you represent redness on this spot or that spot or using this average frequency of pulses or that frequency? The important thing from a fitness perspective is that you run away, hide, or fight the predator appropriately. — InPitzotl
The alternative is so lacking in plausibility that I will not bother to reply until specific arguments for it are presented.
— A Raybould
That's your choice, but in effect, given that you're the one claiming to be supporting a proposal that the experiential correlates have a fitness advantage, not answering the question absolutely equates to not addressing the very thing your proposal is supposed to be about. If your proposal is about a tie between fitness and particular experiential correlates of color, it is backed if and only if you can demonstrate what it is about... i.e., tie fitness to experiential correlates of color. This is what I mean by relevance [my emphasis.] — InPitzotl
I do not think it is very speculative to say that our mental abilities are strong determinants of fitness (unless, of course, one thinks our experiences are epiphenomenal.)
— A Raybould
In what way?
— InPitzotl
The alternative is so lacking in plausibility that I will not bother to reply until specific arguments for it are presented. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. — A Raybould
For physicalists, where there is no physical difference, there is no difference simpliciter.
— A Raybould
Sure. So let's focus on the correlates, since that's where the difference would be.
And what are those correlates?
— A Raybould
I don't know, but I think that's the key question. In terms of L1 colors, there are reasonable explanations of development that are works in progress but involve self organization; these generally produce opponent color processes. Example:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fncir.2014.00016/full
This itself requires a bit more study. In terms of color perception in the brain, as I said before, we know there are multiple places of analysis. But there's also the possibility of potential signal space (such as these toy models of potential Poisson rates)... and since the signals potentially start this way there may be transference from these signal rates to positions, or not. But "qualia" may be more complex than many philosophers tend to treat it as well; e.g., there's such a thing as pain that doesn't hurt, suggesting that qualia aren't necessarily singular in the first place. This might be explained as pain in practice actually having separable pieces that typically are co-associated but not essentially so, and the same could possibly be true of color. What we're looking at developmentally for different-experience would be any sort of theory that starts with this brain in a semi-random developmental state and just "settles into" the "nearest corners". The entire question here (that has not yet actually been addressed) is how many "corners" are there, why are there that many, and how do the L1 colors map into them? Assuming opponency-sized "corners", a same-experience theory would postulate four to six of them, and some sort of specific developmental pathway whereby particular opponent signals latch into the specific four (or six) that they're supposed to map to.[my emphasis.] — InPitzotl
What I am saying here could be falsified
— A Raybould
...I'm fine with that, but "adequately justified" is more akin to what you're saying being verified. — InPitzotl
Argument and counter-argument are the principal methods of philosophy
— A Raybould
Yes, but counterarguments should not have to require an opposition taking a side to provide the counterarguments, and most certainly should not require the opposition to hold the countering view as an opinion... — InPitzotl
Also, two people discussing a thing need not necessarily each pick a corner and box; it's entirely possible, and may even be more productive, for the two to simply walk hand in hand from corner to corner. — InPitzotl
So, let's get back to tetrachromacy. Let's suppose we introduce a new gene in the human gene pool, call it OPN1MW3. OPN1MW3 expresses in people who have it by producing an M cone with spectral sensitivity shifted towards blue by the same amount (measured in frequency) that M shifts L spectral sensitivity towards blue; let's call this a N cone. This gene is an allele for the M on the X chromosome. So suppose we have: (a) Adam, who has L, M, and S cones; (b) Bill, who has L, N, and S cones; (c) Cindy, who has L, M, N, and S cones. So here are some questions. (a1) Is Adam likely to be a trichromat? (b1) Is Bill? (c1) Is Cindy more likely to be a tetrachromat or a trichromat?
(c1) is the interesting question... but regardless of its answer we still have followups. If the developmental process is such that Cindy's likely to become a tetrachromat, then there are questions about what exactly causes the L2 colors that Bill sees; your hypothesis suggests it's some built-in gene, but if self organization suffices to establish L2 colors this is questionable. But if Cindy is only a tetrachromat if she has some other specific gene, some BN (brain-gene-N analog; here, this is just a generic referent... it could be more than one gene), that pre-structures her brain, then we must also ask whether Bill can have that gene as well, or under what conditions precisely Bill sees what Cindy sees that Adam doesn't see.
Your hypothesis seems to require a "BM" gene of sorts. Okay, we have the human genome mapped out... so which gene is BM? — InPitzotl
The point isn't to simply maintain some position with unreasonable standards though. The point is to require relevance. The thing being talked about here is the actual stuff happening between our ears in our soft pink squishy warm brains, that has to do with our subjective conscious experience of colors. Some discussion of and/or constraints on how that subjective experience's correlates develop is necessary to provide a theory of how much the subjective experience's correlates can vary. Without having that discussion or addressing what those constraints are, you're just plain not having the required conversation [my emphasis.] — InPitzotl
I am guessing that your emphasis on 'established' indicates that you were aware of this, but I had in mind cerebral and congenital achromatopsia and dyschromatopsia, color agnosia
— A Raybould
Achromatopsia and dyschromatopsia are the same modes of L1 level color deficiencies previously discussed (though there are acquired forms). Color agnosia as far as I'm aware is a defect of the ventral stream, which is particularly interesting for awareness of L2 colors at all (if not L2 modes of color at all). I would be interested in an L2 specific defect. — InPitzotl
While your stated goal, apparently, is to show that the notion that our experiences are similar to a first approximation does not achieve hypothesis-hood
— A Raybould
I've no objection to same-experience as a hypothesis. My objection is claiming that the hypothesis is adequately justified prematurely. — InPitzotl
Stop right here. No. The possibility does not invalidate your hypothesis; that's not the point of it. Your hypothesis is inadequately justified. The possibilities simply highlight ways in which you can be wrong that you haven't actually addressed.It goes back to your attempt to claim that the possibility of behaviorally-invariant inverted spectra somehow invalidated my hypothesis, — A Raybould
We disagree over how well your justification supports your hypothesis.We disagree, apparently, on how plausible it is. — A Raybould
Wrong criteria. "Adequately justified" is the phrase I've used, in multiple posts. It's not about dismissal, it's about the criteria for acceptance. So apply the surprise test. I feel you have not yet made a case sufficient for a third party to find it surprising, based on the case you've made, to find the hypothesis wrong.I feel that you have not yet made the case that a third party should summarily dismiss this hypothesis. — A Raybould
Just to clarify, section 2 is talking about behaviorally undetectable inverted spectra, not undetectable inverted spectra. They're talking about different things that the guy with inverted spectra might do. If you can analyze his brain and find different representations of color, that's not what they mean.This section shows that, as a matter of fact, undetectable inverted spectra cases are sparse among all possibilities, and an explanation of why they are does not, of course, dispute the fact that they are. — A Raybould
I hope you didn't search too hard, because the terms L0, L1, and L2 are simply defined by me in this thread for your specific benefit, for the purpose of this discussion, in this post.I had regarded your focus on L2 as just a case of unnecessary specificity, but when I looked for something justifying this specificity, I did not find any use of L1/L2 terminology with regard to color perception and experience - perhaps you can provide some references, and explain the relevance of your specificity? — A Raybould
Colorimetry is based roughly on Grassmann's laws. L1 colors in short then are produced by our three cones under photopic conditions, and result from our trichromaticity. This collapses the full visible spectrum (L0) into three distinct cone channels. There is also the opponent color process, which is triggered primarily by processes in the eye (namely, ganglia cells that connect the signals from the cones, lying behind bipolar cells); so I'm lumping this into L1 (from a colorimetric perspective, opponent processes don't change anything; a spectral metamer is still that metamer and therefore still the same point in a colorimetric space). L1 colors are critical for experiences, because everything gates through them... if a person's eye cannot distinguish one metamer from another, then neither can his brain, and neither can he. But it's pretty out there to speculate that eyeballs experience color.It is similar to spectrophotometry, but is distinguished by its interest in reducing spectra to the physical correlates of color perception, most often the CIE 1931 XYZ color space tristimulus values and related quantities. — Colorimetry
...and as such, inverted qualia are experiences. So qualia, as in the things being inverted in qualia inversion, are at L2, not at L1.Those new to the topic should first read the entry on qualia. ... Qualia (singular ‘quale’), in a common modern usage, are properties of experiences that type them in phenomenological respects. — Inverted Qualia
Oh that's easy... that falls out pretty much directly from this:More substantively, it is completely unclear to me why my hypothesis requires a BM gene of any sort. — A Raybould
The "learned lessons" are evolutionary adaptations. — A Raybould
Let me just point out here that if this name-the-gene standard of whatever-it-is-that-my-hypothesis-does-not-meet is applied consistently, then a good deal of evolutionary and general biological theory, including the fundamental one that life as we see it today is a result of natural selection, must be thrown out. — A Raybould
What are you talking about? These genes are just portions of a molecule, and they encode photopsins. Photopsins photoisomerize (fold in response to light), and this leads to the chain reaction that causes the cones to send signals. Change the shape of the photopsin and you change the absorption characteristics. For example, L and M's sensitivity curves are close, because erythrolabe and cyanolabe are chemically close, because the encodings for them on the associated genes encode for those particular close molecules.Well, then I am not putting anything at risk by not responding until it is more than just creationists who are making that claim. — A Raybould
Let me deal with this first, I'll speak to the more significant issues you raise in your previous reply to me, concerning the notion of information content, in a later post.There is alternative way of looking at your argument, by introducing premise 0: Everything that anyone could know about color vision is physically-encodable.
As I have pointed out on a number of occasions throughout our discussion, the physicalist can object to the claim, expressed in premise 7 of my latest argument, that Mary learns anything new when she sees that red tomato. As far as I can see, all Jackson has on his side for motivating acceptance of it is intuition, and not in the Cartesian sense of that word, but the colloquial sense in which it is akin to something like inspired guess work. Is intuition in that sense a sound basis for support? Maybe in the end all we have to go on is intuition, but that is a metaphilosophical question. However, if a physicalist does want to reject premise 7, note that they are rejecting the argument for reasons other than those first put forward by Churchland and later expanded on by Crane etc. Those objections were based on the claim that Jackson was guilty of more or less subtle forms of equivocation, which may well be true. My final argument, however, has removed those equivocations. Right from the beginning, you may remember, my aim was to circumvent Churchlandish responses to Jackson's argument, whilst leaving something behind that at least retained the spirit of Jackson's argument. If, now, after amendment in the form of my latest argument, the physicalist is actually being pushed into the corner of rejecting the claim that Mary learns anything new, then that particular aim has been accomplished. My adapted argument also focuses the issues where, to my mind, they need to be focussed, which is on the theory of content that lies in the shared representationalist background of both the physicalist and dualist positions....which takes us to the points you make in your other reply, which I will reflect upon a little more before responding.and therefore premise 7 cannot be added to this argument without invalidating it.
Certainly there is not. However, the only acceptable premise to add to an argument that is presented as a complete argument is a premise that is hidden. The premise 0 that you are offering is certainly NOT a hidden premise of my argument.There is nothing wrong with introducing a new premise into a discussion.
Of course, you would not want to accept premise 0 in any argument, but that is beside the point,
You seem to be under the impression that I am implying that premise 7 must be false, but the point here is, instead, that if your argument, for the proposition that all knowledge having physically-encodable information is discursively-learnable, holds, then what non- question-begging reply do you have to the claim that Mary could have learned everything beforehand?
Information content can of course be the content of knowledge, but since realism about information content is being assumed, it need not be the content of any actual knowledge. A simple example, if we assume realism quite generally, there could well be a fallen tree in a forest somewhere that no one has seen, the trunk of which has 70 rings. That physical state, which we can describe in a finite set of propositions at whatever level of detail we like, has the information content that that particular tree had survived 70 seasons of growth. Note the the information content is here identified with a single proposition. There may be more information content than just this encoded in the phyiscal state of the tree, but there is at least this. One fine day, someone walks through the forest and comes across the fallen tree and counts the rings and forms the belief that that particular tree had survived 70 seasons of growth. Let's assume a version of physicalism and that that person is in a physical state that we can identify with her believing that that tree had survived 70 seasons of growth. That physical state is describable by a finite set of propositions, this just follows from the finitude of human beings. The information content of that state is the same as the information content physically encoded in the tree itself, i.e. the information content identifiable by the proposition that that tree had survived 70 seasons of growth. Is it now clear to you what I mean by information content and that it need not necessarily be the content of anyone's actual knowledge, and so objections to premise 4 need to be metaphysical in nature and not epistemological, unless you wish to challenge realism.Premise 4 is "Anything that is physically encodeable is information content that is encodeable." Given the context, I took "information content" to mean the information content of knowledge. If it is not that, then what is it the content of?
suppose we have some system having information on account of being in physical state ψ. if the corresponding propositions you have in mind are not a description of that state, then what are they? It is far from obvious that such propositions must exist, whether as a consequence of Shannon's information theory or of anything else. As things stand, proposition 1 lacks any justification.
But I am not simply rejecting it, I have presented an argument against it. Assuming the argument is deductively valid, which on the surface it is, the skeptic who wants to contest its soundness, and thus reject its conclusion, has a number of choices, whilst remaining rational. These include:The point is that you cannot simply reject the skeptic's assumption of the antithesis of your argument without begging the question.
you are in the corner of having not yet given a non- question-begging reply to the problem of why Mary was unable to learn it before t1.
As for your objection that this goes beyond your initial limited claims against Churchland's reply to Jackson, it would be inconsistent for you to do what you are doing - trying repeatedly to find an argument that holds up - while insisting that I must stick with only my first presentation of Churchland's argument (if the latter rule were applied consistently, there would be no debate about anything!) It would also be a contradiction to say that your latest argument is on-topic, while attempts to refute it are off-topic.
I thought I had been clear about this point, and here is a quotation from an earlier post of mine, emphasis added:Your claim that "the only acceptable premise to add to an argument that is presented as a complete argument is a premise that is hidden" only applies if it is being claimed that the resulting argument is effectively the same as the original.
Regardless of how many ways this discursively-learnable information is the same as that encoded in the trunk's state, it is not identical to the latter information in at least three ways: 1) it is encoded as a physical state in the observer's brain, not a physical state of the trunk; 2) unlike the information in the trunk, it is the information content of someone's knowledge; 3) the trunk can be destroyed, while the observer continues to know something about its age when it fell.
Perhaps, but, 25 days ago. you responded specifically to this:I see that you still have no clear idea what my argument is — A Raybould
...with this:"... but to simply conclude that the color experiences are the same because we're all human sounds to me more like guesswork. — InPitzotl" — A Raybould
It doesn't approach being a proof, but, IMHO, it is a plausible hypothesis. Per my earlier post, I would not propose that everyone's experience is the same in detail, but that for most people, there is a broad degree of functional equivalence. — A Raybould
So while you're speculating, is that because you're inexplicably the most important person in the world to me, or can you explain why my post count isn't a lot higher than it is given I'm just out to dispute people at random? (E.g., note that all this time, I haven't intervened on either side with your discussions with jkg20... isn't that curious?) Also, why do you feel the need to share your ridiculous speculations about my motivations with me, who one would think would be in a much better place to know said motivations?largely, it seems, as a result of your attempts to paraphrase it into something that you can dispute. — A Raybould
I'm sure you will.I will reply with a lot more detail — A Raybould
Jackson's use of the word "knew" needs to be clarified. When Jackson claims Mary "knew everything physical about the color red" he refers to everything except the direct experience of redness — TheMadFool
Mary knew everything that could be known in the third person about color vision.
She did not know what it was like to experience color vision in the first person.
This does illustration that first-person experience is not knowable from the third person. — Pfhorrest
That experience consists - in part at least - of physical interactions. Thus, Mary did not know everything physical about the color red. — creativesoul
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