As if there is only one real "knowing what red is". — Banno
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
Yes, I interpret colors as biological signs (like the genetic code is a set of biological signs). — Olivier5
Seeing an object as red is thus a matter not of comparing it with an internal sample (or representation) but of associating it with red things in general. — bongo fury
So then what do you make of:So then what? — frank
Is convention right?Convention says I know your pain by thinking of my own. — frank
And Marchesk says he doesn't agree that qualia are symbols. — bongo fury
We can also perform all of the pain behaviors without being in pain, depending on how good of an actor one is. — Marchesk
which can still be undermined by identifying your 'neural underpinnings', as you put it). — Isaac
That only works we can correlate with experiences we already have. — Marchesk
When you say a blind person can't know what red is, you just mean that a blind person cannot see red. Not that they know nothing about red. — Banno
a feeling that represents what you think of as your response to red, right now. — Isaac
If you're making the argument that what comes to mind when we think of "red" is not constant, sure, no disagreement there. From anyone I think. But it is largely similar. — khaled
The minute detail of difference renders your experience private. — Isaac
There's nothing special about the first which makes grouping them by loose affiliation OK but the second not. — Isaac
All knowledge is inferred. — Isaac
How are your own pain sensations inferred? From what are they inferred? — Luke
The minute detail of difference renders your experience private. — Isaac
Yea I thought it was clear I dropped that.
There's nothing special about the first which makes grouping them by loose affiliation OK but the second not. — Isaac
Yup.
Sort of feel bad that this is all I say after you wrote all that — khaled
They're inferred by models in the primary somatosensory cortex. They're inferred from signals sent by from the thalamus (via nociceptor endings and transfer neurons in the spinal cord). These are then modulated, filtered and suppressed in turn by models in the frontal cortex which is where cultural mediation, semantics, other somatosensory feedback and environmental cues come in to play. — Isaac
Who is making these inferences? Not you. That is, not the same ‘you’ that is the subject of pain sensations, so I think this is a category error of sorts. — Luke
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