You're talking about carving up our experiences into meaningful categories. That would be true of the world outside the body as well. — Marchesk
With public epiphenomena we have the arbitrary (and loose) linguistic boundaries, with their 'props' of set membership. — Isaac
But animals can perform color and other sensory discriminations without language. — Marchesk
Animals know when they're in pain. Pain would be a useless sensation if an organism couldn't recognize that something was causing potential damage. — Marchesk
The problem is that human language is relatively recent ability added onto much older nuerological abilities that handle experiencing things like pain so that the organism can respond appropriates. — Marchesk
But what if someone's neurology is atypical? Can I know what it's like to be Hellen Keller? — Marchesk
Will science tell us exactly when someone lies? — Marchesk
Perhaps we'll get a printout of their inner dialog, or hear them in our earbuds. — Marchesk
the right chemicals will be released in our brains so we can have their feelings. — Marchesk
And all objects you can refer to with the word "red" do not share anything at all in your experience? Not even a vague resemblance? I find that hard to believe. — khaled
Would you be able to guess its color? I find that likely. Even though you never heard the color of that object being uttered before. — khaled
Although those are also commonalities of red things, they are not the commonalities we use to distinguish them in everyday life. — khaled
When I ask you what the color of something you've never seen before is, you don't pull out an optic wavelength meter. You can just tell by looking at it. You don't need to know the wavelength emitted. — khaled
So the thing common to red things that you use to tell them apart must be in the experience produced when we look at them. — khaled
the way we tell is by finding common aspects in our experience as I show above. But the contents of the experience need not be the same. — khaled
How do you know that the experiences you have when you injure yourself are the same as everyone else's experiences when they use the word "pain"? — Luke
Again, how are you distinguishing 'pain' from the entire milieu of experience at any given time without the public definitions? — Isaac
I acknowledged in my last post that pain is defined by the public concept. I'm talking about the associated feeling that goes along with it. The same associated feeling that you acknowledge is the study of neurology. — Luke
Witt actually says: "It’s not a Something, but not a Nothing either! The conclusion was only that a Nothing would render the same service as a Something about which nothing could be said." — Luke
Isn't your position that the public concept completely defines the experience? If so, then why do you agree that we need neuroscience "to tell us exactly what feeling(s) corresponds to what set of neuronal activity"? If the public concept completely defines the experience, then shouldn't we already know which experiences map to which behaviours - and shouldn't it be the same for everyone who uses the word? — Luke
What is the purpose of further research and how can Richard be colour-blind if he uses the word "red" correctly? — Luke
Right. Well, the same question to that then. How do you know which of your thousands of responses/feelings are the ones associated with 'pain' and which are associated with the room you happen to be standing in, or your mood, or some fleeting memory, or... — Isaac
Here, you're equivocating on your use of 'behaviours' Previously you'd said that neural activity counted as a behaviour. If so then it's not true to say that "we already know which experiences map to which behaviours". — Isaac
He doesn't consistently use the word 'red' correctly. There are shades which can't be distinguished even from the intensity of saturation, and edge cases will have poorer contrast. If this were not the case, then how would we ever know anyone was colourblind? How would we ever have found out the function of cone cells if no public language could distinguish their proper functioning from their restricted one? — Isaac
No, because "knowing what it's like" doesn't make any sense. But lets' not open that can of worms again. — Isaac
To have someone else's feeling in a neurological sense, you'd have to have a sufficiently similar set of neurons firing during the time period of assessment. This would certainly require the same availability of neurotransmitters in the same proportions, but it would also require the same set of axon potentials prior to the assessment period. — Isaac
An organism only need to respond appropriately to stimuli. It need not group aspects of that response. Fighting for a mate involves pain, but the animal continues nonetheless, standing on a sharp thorn involves pain but the animal desists immediately. 'Pain' doesn't cause some pre-programmed response. The entire set of environmental stimuli at the time does. — Isaac
I can't be sure that other people have an identical feeling to mine, — Luke
feelings are not a something, and not a nothing, either. — Banno
"Are your feelings exactly the same as mine?" is less like "Do you have the same mobile phone as I do?" and more like "Have you stopped beating your wife yet?". — Banno
"Are your feelings exactly the same as mine?" is less like "Do you have the same mobile phone as I do?" and more like "Have you stopped beating your wife yet?". — Banno
We understand what it is to ask if your phone is the same as mine. We can bring the phones out and compare them and make a decision one way or the other. — Banno
Avoidance — Banno
We understand what it is to ask if your phone is the same as mine. We can bring the phones out and compare them and make a decision one way or the other.
Grammatical similarities tempt us to do the same with pain. But you cannot pull out your pain to compare it to mine. — Banno
Hm....accuse... — Luke
...the way we usually do. The notion that feelings must be either public or private takes form from the erroneous idea that comparing feelings is like comparing phones and noses....how should we be talking about sensations... — Luke
Hm — Banno
...the way we usually do. The notion that feelings must be either public or private takes form from the erroneous idea that comparing feelings is like comparing phones and noses.
As if "I have a pain in my foot" were like "I have an iPhone" - the similarity is superficial, and disappears as soon as you ask for proof. — Banno
It's a private iPhone. I can't show it to you. — Banno
But feelings are not exactly like noses.
Asking if someone else has the very same feeling as I do is treating feelings as if they were noses or mobile phones. It's taking that language and misapplying it; feelings are not a something, and not a nothing, either.
"Are your feelings exactly the same as mine?" is less like "Do you have the same mobile phone as I do?" and more like "Have you stopped beating your wife yet?". — Banno
How could I possibly guess it's colour if I didn't know the name of it's colour? What would my answer consist of? — Isaac
You're undermining your own position on epiphenomenology. Just because the experience accompanies the physical activity in the brain, doesn't mean it is the cause of it. — Isaac
I was asking you about the nature of that content, but you seem to have avoided the question. — Isaac
I know which feelings are associated with 'pain' because I was taught the language and the use of the word. — Luke
I can't be sure that other people have an identical feeling to mine — Luke
if you know how to use the word, then the experience/feeling should already be defined. So why does it require any further research/definition? — Luke
It doesn't get discovered by being able to see how red looks to Richard. It gets discovered from his behaviour, including his inconsistent use of the word. — Luke
How red looks to Richard is private and subjective. — Luke
I know which feelings are associated with 'pain' because I was taught the language and the use of the word.
— Luke
How would that work, if your feelings are private? — Isaac
I can't be sure that other people have an identical feeling to mine
— Luke
Then how do you know those non-identical aspects have anything to do with the public concept 'pain'? — Isaac
It makes sense to some of us. Those of us who think there's something to being conscious, and not all conscious experiences are the same across sensations, people and organisms. — Marchesk
So the answer is science cannot completely show us the conscious experiences of other people. Or bats for that matter. — Marchesk
Yes, but the animal knows what a mate smells like, what food tastes like, and what kind of brightly colored pattern a poisonous animal is likely to have. — Marchesk
Of course it's usually in the form of object recognition like mate or foe, so there is complex cognition going on for many animals that combines sensations into things in an environment. — Marchesk
The point is other animals carve up the world successfully without language. — Marchesk
The point is: When the cone cells process the same wavelength don’t they produce the same epiphenomena? Can’t that be the commonality between red things? — khaled
The fact that we have a similar epiphenomena when looking at red things is caused by the fact that the physical reaction to red things is similar (same wavelength getting processed). — khaled
they’ll produce a similar experience in exposure to similar wavelengths. — khaled
I know which of my feelings/sensations are associated with 'pain' because I was taught the language and the use of the word. I make my own association between this feeling and the concept. — Luke
You have a whole range of constantly varying feelings at any given time. How did you know which ones were associated with the public concept 'pain' and which ones were unrelated feelings you just happened to be having? — Isaac
I was taught the use of the word. But I don't see the point of your question. I'm not talking about the privacy of language, but the privacy of sensations. — Luke
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