Just to make sure I understand, a belief is a thing in your own mind, and also a pattern of behaviour? But for a cat it's just a pattern of behaviour? — Daemon
Well, no, I think that very badly expressed. — Banno
Oh, I'm sorry, it was an honest attempt to summarise what you said. Where did I go wrong? — Daemon
Stove's Gem. We can't see the world as it really is because we have eyes. — Andrew M
Both Wittgenstein and Dennett acknowledge that there is a private aspect of conscious experience. — Luke
...I don't think it's very clear from the paper (and, perhaps more so, from his defenders here) what Dennett intends to deny: — Luke
and:Which idea of qualia am I trying to extirpate? ...Qualia are supposed to be special properties, in some hard-to-define way. My claim--which can only come into focus as we proceed--is that conscious experience has no properties that are special in any of the ways qualia have been supposed to be special.
The job of setting out what qualia are is were it should be: with the advocates of qualia. The purpose of the article is to set out the considerable difficulties involved.I want to shift the burden of proof, so that anyone who wants to appeal to private, subjective properties has to prove first that in so doing they are not making a mistake.
Meaning existed prior to our knowledge and/or awareness of our own thought and belief about the world and/or ourselves(conscious experience), and did so as a direct result of creatures capable of drawing correlations between different things doing so. — creativesoul
Where's the explicit account of how meaning first emerges onto the world stage in it's most basic identifiable form such that it continues to grow and/or evolve over a sufficient enough time period so as to provide enough groundwork, a semantically rich enough basis, for us to be able to begin naming and describing all of the different aspects of own personal experiences as well as getting the simple language less ones right? — creativesoul
We use talk of beliefs in order to explain human behaviour. We can extend this to cats, but the belief is not a thing in the mind of the cat; it's just a pattern of behaviour. That is, the belief is not in the cat, but in the explanation. — Banno
Would you also hold that your own belief is not a thing in your own mind, but only a pattern of behaviour? — Daemon
Just to make sure I understand, a belief is a thing in your own mind, and also a pattern of behaviour? But for a cat it's just a pattern of behaviour? — Daemon
Do you want us to conclude that, hence, we cannot not talk about the world as it is? — Banno
Because plainly, that does not follow.
Why don't folk present arguments here, instead of innuendo? — Banno
To summarize: we have established that if absent qualia are possible, then Fading Qualia are possible; if inverted qualia are possible, then Dancing Qualia are possible; and if absent qualia are possible, then Dancing Qualia are possible. But it is implausible that Fading Qualia are possible, and it is extremely implausible that Dancing Qualia are possible. It is therefore extremely implausible that absent qualia and inverted qualia are possible. It follows that we have good reason to believe that the principle of organizational invariance is true, and that functional organization fully determines conscious experience.
But of course the paradox is rather easily resolved if we recognize that having words in mind or thinking silently in words no more implies that we have anything called a mind with words in it than having peace as a hope implies that we have anything called peace or a hope. — Goodman, On Thoughts Without Words
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