they’ll produce a similar experience in exposure to similar wavelengths.
— khaled
Yep. — Isaac
So the content of that experience (the one just caused by your cone cells responding to 600nm wavelengths) can't have anything whatsoever to do with your big toe can it? — Isaac
the only way we're dividing the experience of 'red' from everything else going on at the time is by restricting it to that which is caused by your cone cells responding to 600nm wavelengths. — Isaac
Which of those are your private sensation of 'pain'? How does the, let's say couple of hundred, occasions where you see the word 'pain' being used tell you which of those several million sensations are your 'pain', and which are unrelated? — Isaac
they’ll produce a similar experience in exposure to similar wavelengths.
— khaled
Yep. — Isaac
But a second ago when I asked you whether or not there is something common between experiences of red you replied with a staunch “No”. So what happened? — khaled
So the content of that experience (the one just caused by your cone cells responding to 600nm wavelengths) can't have anything whatsoever to do with your big toe can it? — Isaac
False. — khaled
the only way we're dividing the experience of 'red' from everything else going on at the time is by restricting it to that which is caused by your cone cells responding to 600nm wavelengths. — Isaac
Agreed. Except the experience of red need not be the same for different people does it? Even if they have similar V4 areas, there is plenty of other physical differences between them that can account for them having different experiences. — khaled
I'm following your line of thinking. — Isaac
By that definition, it can't be defined by being caused by wavelengths of light can it — Isaac
There are no signals running from your cone cells to your big toe in response to the wavelength of light, so how can a signal from your big toe be causally related to the signal from your cone cells if there's no physical connection? — Isaac
The only way we're carving out some aspect of a person's holistic experience as being of red is that it is caused by the same physical components as are stimulated by the 600nm wavelength (or that they are associated with the word 'red' - therefore publicly learnt). — Isaac
If so, then how do you explain the fact when people see new objects they can easily tell what color they are? — khaled
So when I see that table, the light reflecting from it hits my retina which causes a cascade of signals to travel through my brain, one of which (combined with other signals identifying your request and an appropriate type of response), causes me to form the word 'red'. — Isaac
What makes you think there needs to be a physical connection for a physical difference to have an effect on the epiphenomena? — khaled
It's how we're identifying what the epiphenomenon is of. Otherwise, how are you claiming that the aspect of your whole epiphenomenological experience at the time is in any way 'of red'? — Isaac
Why not? I don't get that from what I just said. Science can't show us now. But nothing in what I said precludes science from showing us in principle - which is what we're talking about here. — Isaac
You have some evidence for this? — Isaac
Right. Which undermines what you just said. They need not know "what a mate smells like, what food tastes like, and what kind of brightly colored pattern a poisonous animal is likely to have" What they evidently 'know' is what to do in a range of circumstances. — Isaac
As you admit above, it is far from evident that they do this in any way other than a holistic assessment of the entire set of signals at any given time. — Isaac
The point is other animals carve up the world successfully without language. — Marchesk
Isn't carving up the world a good rough definition of language, in the wider sense of symbolism or reference? — bongo fury
So perhaps you just mean, without specifically verbal language, but qualia are internal symbols? You don't need words to speak the language of colour and smell etc? — bongo fury
Which of those are your private sensation of 'pain'? — Isaac
The one that hurts — Luke
'Hurts' is just another word for pain. Your answer is circular. — Isaac
You don't see someone scream in agony and also see their pain sensation, do you? So how do you verify a person's sensations? Do you have anything more than inferences from their behaviour? — Luke
Let's start over. — khaled
First, let's establish whether or not people having different contents of epiphenomena is possible theoretically. Is there any theory or law that breaks by me having a different experience of red from you? — khaled
Why not? I don't get that from what I just said. Science can't show us now. But nothing in what I said precludes science from showing us in principle - which is what we're talking about here. — Isaac
Because you stated that one would have to possess the same neural makeup to have all the same experiences. — Marchesk
You have some evidence for this? — Isaac
Cognitive Science, evolutionary biology, various animal studies and object recognition and mapping in computing systems. — Marchesk
Right. Which undermines what you just said. They need not know "what a mate smells like, what food tastes like, and what kind of brightly colored pattern a poisonous animal is likely to have" What they evidently 'know' is what to do in a range of circumstances. — Isaac
In order to do that, they need to be able to cognate, which includes object recognition. — Marchesk
As you admit above, it is far from evident that they do this in any way other than a holistic assessment of the entire set of signals at any given time. — Isaac
I don't see how this helps for navigating the environment. An organism must be able to filter out noise and determine what's important to focus on. — Marchesk
If your position is that sensations are public rather than private, then how do you access/see them? — Luke
You don't see someone scream in agony and also see their pain sensation, do you? So how do you verify a person's sensations? Do you have anything more than inferences from their behaviour? — Luke
You don't see someone scream in agony and also see their pain sensation, do you? So how do you verify a person's sensations? Do you have anything more than inferences from their behaviour? — Luke
Obviously not, or faking pain for deception or acting — Marchesk
The 'of red' bit. In order for it to be an experience of red and not just an experience you happen to be having at the same time as seeing an object emitting 600nm wavelength, it has to be tied somehow to either the detection of the wavelength (if you want to take a very neurological approach), or to the public definition of 'red' (if you want to take a more linguistic approach). — Isaac
As I explained earlier, there is a 'leaky'* cascade of neural activity which leads from your cone cells to you preparedness to say/write/identify the colour red, right? — Isaac
So it's properties (structure or content doesn't matter - all it's properties) result from this loosely identified neural stream by definition. — Isaac
So what you think of as your experience 'of red' is a post hoc collection of re-activated neural activity generated by existing neural circuits themselves moulded and pruned by your cultural environment. — Isaac
You cannot have an experience 'of red' that is not selected and (to some extent) even completed made up, by the cultural definition of red. — Isaac
We have no evidence that all its properties are caused by these neural streams. — khaled
If any of it's properties are derived from something other than that stream it's no longer the epiphenomena 'of red'. — Isaac
False.
The content can be derived from something else. As long as the structure is the same then it is "of red". The structure is decided by activity in the V4 area.
What is "of red" is decided by the activity in the V4 area. However the content of the experience can still be decided by something else. There is no problem in that. If you think there is then what is it? — khaled
I asked you what properties of experience were changed and what preserved in your isomorphisms — Isaac
but you just changed the subject. — Isaac
The content is changed. — khaled
Color inverting glasses. Color inverting glasses would be an example of a structure preserving, content altering physical change. I thought the example makes it clear what I mean. — khaled
You define content as if it were a single property, yet later talk about different content. In order for two 'contents' to differ, they must themselves be composed of properties which differ. I'm asking what these properties are. — Isaac
Yet here the content is caused by cone cells - part of the neural cascade I described. That's how we know it's a change in the content of colour experience and not a change in the content of some other experience. — Isaac
I don't understand. It's like you're saying we can't access something in more than one way. I access my sensations by other neural circuits connected to my nervous system. — Isaac
A sufficiently advanced neurologist could access them by fMRI, or microprobe, or whatever advanced technique is next developed. — Isaac
...with the advent of neuroscience we can start to piece together neural correlates. — Isaac
when those models are sufficiently robust, we can start to make inferences even without behaviour. — Isaac
No-one ever fakes pain. — Isaac
But you said "science cannot completely show us the conscious experiences of other people". You didn't say 'give us'. The two are different. — Isaac
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