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
I'm sorry but this legitimately read like word salad. I have no clue what you're saying. — khaled
as my example shows, the content of experience can change even if the V4 area doesn't at all. All it takes is some glasses. — khaled
The example I gave still has the change taking place in the visual system so is not evidence that any physical change (such as toes) can be responsible for content determining difference: I would agree. I would also add however that the human body is very integrated. Almost anything will cause a change in the visual system. — khaled
If someone were to put on color inverting glasses from birth. And these color inverting glasses we couldn't detect for some reason. Would we be able to tell they had them on? — khaled
You can obviously access your own sensations. I meant/implied how can you access other people's sensations (rather than their behaviour). — Luke
...with the advent of neuroscience we can start to piece together neural correlates. — Isaac
Neural correlates are not behaviours? This is still inference. — Luke
If sensations were public, then you wouldn't have to make inferences about them. — Luke
what is the property of the content which makes A not B? — Isaac
I could tell by looking at them. I could tell by examining their eyes — Isaac
And these color inverting glasses we couldn't detect for some reason. — khaled
That's just not true in the sense we use the term. That's what I mean by a 'leaky' cascade. Despite the small streams of signal chains which enter and leave the main route, it's absolutely obvious which is the main route. Obvious enough to label. If you don't accept fuzzy edges to labels, then you're not going to be able to use the vast majority of language. It's like saying we can't use the word 'cup' because there are a few edge cases were it's not clear if it's a cup or a vase.
The neural signal cascade is clear enough, and has distinct enough boundaries for use to legitimately say what neural processes are part of it and which aren't, to the same degree (if not better) than you could say experience X is and experience 'of red' and not just 'of everything'. — Isaac
I was thinking in terms of the cognitive structures the brain produces internally to make sense of the world. But yeah, animals don't need language to understand smells and colors. I wouldn't consider them symbols, though. — Marchesk
Rather, blue the qualia is a sign that signifies 470nm light. — hypericin
We can specify what physical differences are responsible for both content determining and structure determining differences. Though we haven't done so yet. So practically private. For now. — khaled
don't believe you. — Marchesk
I really don't get the behaviorists. It's so clear to me how they're wrong. — Marchesk
set up this ludicrous notion that if someone faked pain we have no behavioural method of telling, that we'd have to get our fMRI scanners out as our only resort. — Isaac
Because, presumably lacking your own fMRI, how would you ever find out they did, if not by their behaviour. — Isaac
No, the issue is that pain can be faked successfully, not that we have no way of potentially finding out after the fact. — Marchesk
The takeaway from this is that behavior is not consciousness, because you can have behavior absent the experience — Marchesk
We can do some of the behaviours of being in pain, or we can do all of them. That we can do only some doesn't have any bearing at all on what doing all of them would constitute — Isaac
The best I would concede is a feeling that represents what you think of as your response to red, right now. It may be different in the next few seconds and you may be wrong about it being in response to red (using the public definition of 'red'). — Isaac
So if there is an epiphenomenological qualia of 'red', no-one knows what it is. — Isaac
a feeling that represents what you think of as your response to red, right now. — Isaac
They can see exactly what is in response to 'red' (tracing the main neural cascade from the cone cells), but they can't link that the the detail of how you're feeling because the links are too complex. — Isaac
A blind neurologist will never know that red is. Though he will know the physical condition under which the epiphenomena manifests. — khaled
Rather, blue the qualia is a sign that signifies 470nm light.
— hypericin
But ok, perhaps that doesn't describe yours or Luke's or @khaled's or @Olivier5's position? — bongo fury
What color is this table? — khaled
A blind neurologist will never know that red is. — khaled
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