• noname
    14
    And what are the best arguments against the existence of qualia?
  • bert1
    2k
    Good question. I'm against the concept of qualia. I think it's confusing and unnecessary. But I definitely do believe in subjectivity in the sense I think you mean it. I don't agree with attempts to explain subjectivity in terms of other things like functions or modelling or phi or whatever.
  • Marchesk
    4.6k
    Everyone agrees that we have experiences of seeing color, hearing sound, feeling pain and what not. But people are going to hotly disagree on the semantics of those terms as they fit into one's preferred solution or defense of the hard problem when it comes to qualia. For some that means dissolving the dispute.

    Objections to qualia include its incompatibility with physicalism, the problem it poses for a scientific understanding, and how it makes our conscious world private from others. Those who don't like the subjective/objective split tend to favor dissolving the distinction in favor of everything including mental activity being part of the world. For people who don't like how it's incompatible with the material world, they will point out that it's hard to see how the brain and qualia could interact. Thus the old objections to dualism.

    And then there are those who just don't like there being a substantial philosophical problem that doesn't go away, particularly of the metaphysical variety. They tend to view such problems as highly suspect and in need of linquistic therapy.

    Personally, I don't see any solution to the hard problem as workable (at least so far). We're conscious, consciousness is at least somewhat subjective, private and non-reducible to brain functioning. That it poses a significant problem is interesting. But I tend to think metaphysical problems are substantial and maybe we're just not smart enough or scientifically advanced enough to solve them yet.

    Or alternatively, we're not epistemically situated to answer some questions. Some people hate that, but why should humans be able to answer any conceivable question?
  • 180 Proof
    15.4k
    And what are the best arguments against the existence of qualia?noname
    Let's begin with the fact that "qualia" are distinctions in cognitive neuroscience or philosophy of mind which make no informative difference ... (re: summary of Daniel Dennett's "Quining Qualia"). Also, see "the private language argument"(Witty). I'm all for dispensing with apparent / pseudo questions and empty concepts / terms – intellectual hygiene and all that.
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    Denying concepts is not a sound business model for a philosopher. Crafting new concepts is legit, using old words for new ideas is legit, refusing to use words that one deems unclear is legit. But telling other folks what words they should use and what words not to use, that is not legitimate philosophical work. It's more for the Gestapo.

    If one doesn't like the concept of qualia, one can create another one, or just not use the word.

    Merleau-Ponty had a problem with the concept of individual quale, which was that for him, the quale defined as the elementary unit of sensation is not really what perception is made of. One because perception is holistic, it goes from the general to the particular, two because what really matters in perception is not the positive, objective, elementary color 'red' here or there in the picture but the differences and relationships between colors. The elementary unit of visual perception is therefore (according to him) better defined as the differences we spot between two colors. If you paint a canvas with only one color, you can't really represent or perceive anything in it.

    Because I accept this reasoning, I don't use the singular "quale". Like my data, my qualia are always plural and relative.
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    And what are the best arguments against the existence of qualia?noname

    Qualia seems to refer to that ineffable, unwordable, aspect of consciousness. To say that it's not real would mean that everything about consciousness is expressible in words and let's, for the moment, ignore the issue of how well such descriptions will be. Let's conduct a little experiment with me as the subject. I'm, as of this moment, typing these words from my keyboard and I get this distinct sensation from my finger tips - it has a certain quality to it - but as I try to put into words this "distinct sensation" I can't seem to do it. Similarly, I'm reading these words as I type it onto my computer screen - I can see the words clearly and know, to some extent, what these words mean and as I try to convey the conscious experience of reading and knowing these words, I still feel language is not up to the task - there's a certain part of the experience of consciousness that I can't seem to express in words. This, to sum it up, is qualia. Ask Daniel Dennett to describe his consciousness as best as he can and then ask him, "is that all?" or "anything else?" The answer should be "no" and "yes" respectively. In other words, there's something about consciousness that defies description and this ain't so because of linguistic issues; au contraire, something about consciousness is indescribable and that's qualia.
  • bongo fury
    1.6k
    Do those who deny the existence of qualia also deny subjectivity altogether?noname

    If only. Unfortunately they mostly can't resist taunting believers with a more subtle dance, wherein the beetle is supposed irrelevant, but not doubted. [Witness the next two pages...]

    And what are the best arguments against the existence of qualia?noname

    Neural networks: learning, but without the internal images.
  • noname
    14
    Ah thanks for the links. I will watch and come back to this.
  • Banno
    25k
    So let's take "this distinct sensation from my finger tips" and call it "S".

    You might now say: "I have sensation S".

    What is it that has been left out?

    Nothing is left out, since "S" is the name of that sensation, so it includes everything about it...

    As if names were somehow short descriptions.
  • Banno
    25k


    "...denying the existence of quailia"...?

    The issue is more about how useful the notion is (Oliver's criticism, as usual, misses the point).

    Perhaps "qualia" is just a new word for stuff we already talk about, albeit not without some confusion: "red" "loud", "sweet" and so on. If so, it's not too problematic.

    But if it is a name for something new, and if as some advocates suggest, that something is not the sort of thing about which we can talk, then there is an obvious problem. They've named a something about which they say they cannot talk. See my reply to @TheMadFool immediately above.

    The trouble is, if you cannot discuss something, if it is ineffable, then how can it figure in our philosophical rumination? We can talk about something being sweet or loud, without difficulty, because these are words for things that are part of our shared world. But if the supposition is that there qualia are not part of this shared world, then how is it that we might be able to talk about them?

    Advocate for qualia seem to have answered this question to their own satisfaction, but others such as myself remain unconvinced. In conversation - and there have been many on this topic, even here in this forum - these advocates seem to equivocate, talking as if qualia were just "red", "sweet" or "loud" on the one hand, and next telling us that there is something here that cannot be shared.

    The problem is an extrusion from talk of subjectivity. The same considerations apply, and in that way this is a continuation of an ancient philosophical briar patch. If "subjective" just means something like "from where I stand" or "for me", there's not much of an issue. Some folk propose a use of "subjective" which is somehow goes further than this, to be somehow beyond words. Unfortunately they sometimes look to construct entire theories of consciousness, knowledge and the nature of the world from this subjective stuff about which they cannot speak.

    And without noticing the irony.
  • Luke
    2.6k
    You might now say: "I have sensation S".

    What is it that has been left out?
    Banno

    The character or quality of sensation 'S'; what it feels like. In Wittgenstein's argument, it is the private sensation itself, or what each person's beetle looks like.

    In conversation - and there have been many on this topic, even here in this forum - these advocates seem to equivocate, talking as if qualia were just "red", "sweet" or "loud" on the one hand, and next telling us that there is something here that cannot be shared.Banno

    Wittgenstein's brilliant insight was that the character or quality of sensation 'S' is inessential to the use of the name ('S'). It does not matter how red looks to you or to me in order for us to competently use the word "red", because the word does not take its meaning from how red looks to you or to me, i.e. from some subjective character of the sensation. But, just because this character or quality "drops out of consideration as irrelevant" to the language game, this does not mean that there is no character or quality of how red looks to each of us. Given that we are human, red probably looks the same or similar to most of us, but this cannot be verified. Additionally, there is the randomness of evolution and biology to consider.

    Nothing is left out, since "S" is the name of that sensation, so it includes everything about it...

    As if names were somehow short descriptions.
    Banno

    As if the character/quality of qualia and subjectivity were somehow necessarily linguistic or communicable.
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    The issue is more about how useful the notion isBanno

    What's useless to Paul may be useful to Peter.

    All this talk about privacy is just one big distraction. Just so you know, telepathy is an illusion, a real one. Nobody can read other people's minds. Our sensations are private, like our memories are, until one shares some of them. People share only what they want to share, when they want to, and with whom they want to. And even the most loquacious among us can't tell it all. That one cannot verbalize all of one's thoughts and sensations is due to their almost infinite nuances and complexity. Words fail us.

    My hypothesis is that qualia are the biological, memorisable "tags" or identifiers that allow you to recognize a taste or a color, to identify it correctly and consistently over time. One can usually recognize a taste, or a color. Logically, there must be some system of identifiers supporting this capacity.
  • Olivier5
    6.2k
    Bnbb nnbb blnnbmb n bb bbnb bnbbbbbnnnb bb vnbbbnnnnmbnnnnnbbbnnbbbnbn. Nbjnnnnnnnnnnncnnnvbv vvv a n.bbnn . Jnnb nb can nb nbm. Nbbmnnbnnnvn. V nj nn n
  • Banno
    25k
    For the most part I agree; but then this:
    ...this does not mean that there is no character or quality of how red looks to each of us.Luke

    Let's suppose that you are right here; that there is a 'character or quality of how red looks to each of us', that is such that this 'character or quality "drops out of consideration as irrelevant" to the language game'...

    What you are doing is inventing a use of the word qualia to refer to something that drops out of consideration as irrelevant.

    That looks like naming a nothing. It is as unhelpful as "Last night I saw upon the stair, a little man who wasn't there". The words look to be about a little man, but there is no little man to be had.
  • Joshs
    5.7k
    Merleau-Ponty had a problem with the concept of individual quale, which was that for him, the quale defined as the elementary unit of sensation is not really what perception is made of. One because perception is holistic, it goes from the general to the particular, two because what really matters in perception is not the positive, objective, elementary color 'red' here or there in the picture but the differences and relationships between colors.Olivier5

    He would have had a problem with the concept of plural qualia too. You’re right that for Merleau-Ponty what counts in perception is differences and relationships between colors , but he would also argue that colors , and all other perceptions, only emerge as as expressions of the body’s actions in the world. Perception is interpretive all the way down, which means that the concept of qualia is no more coherent than that of sense data.
  • Luke
    2.6k
    What you are doing is inventing a use of the word qualia to refer to something that drops out of consideration as irrelevant.Banno

    I obviously didn't invent the word "Qualia".

    That looks like naming a nothing.Banno

    "It’s not a Something, but not a Nothing either!"

    It is as unhelpful as "Last night I saw upon the stair, a little man who wasn't there".Banno

    Depends what you deem to be "helpful". It seems relevant to the OP.
  • Banno
    25k
    Hm. Think I will take that as your agreeing with my argument.
  • Joshs
    5.7k
    just because this character or quality "drops out of consideration as irrelevant" to the language game, this does not mean that there is no character or quality of how red looks to each of us.Luke

    Yes, but perception is itself a kind of ‘private’ language game. That is to say , what you want to call the felt sensation of red is not a stable primitive of experiencing but a bodily mediated interpretation. One can no more isolate a reproducible scenario of red that one can duplicate an expression of emotion. In both cases you have a complex interpretive activity that is context-dependent. How something looks or tastes in any instant of time cannot be separated from a larger whole of attitudes, perceptions and conceptions which are always transforming themselves. The upshot foe the OP is that you must reject the concept of qualia if you take embodied subjectivity seriously.
  • RogueAI
    2.8k
    "That is to say , what you want to call the felt sensation of red is not a stable primitive of experiencing but a bodily mediated interpretation."

    Unpack this, please.
  • Luke
    2.6k
    Yes, but perception is itself a kind of ‘private’ language game. That is to say , what you want to call the felt sensation of red is not a stable primitive of experiencing but a bodily mediated interpretation. One can no more isolate a reproducible scenario of red that one can duplicate an expression of emotion. In both cases you have a complex interpretive activity that is context-dependent. How something looks or tastes in any instant of time cannot be separated from a larger whole of attitudes, perceptions and conceptions which are always transforming themselves.Joshs

    Maybe, but I'm sure you could pick out a red object if required.
  • Joshs
    5.7k
    Maybe, but I'm sure you could pick out a red object if required.Luke

    Yes, and I’m sure I could spell the word ‘book’ when asked, but that doesn’t tell us very much about what the word means for me, how I’m using it, whether the color red is smooth or textured, whether it feels warm or hot or neutral, what shape or tone or saturation it appears within, whether it is still my favorite color. That I continue to recognize a word doesn’t say anything about how my sense of the pragmatic meaning of the word changes from context to context.
  • Luke
    2.6k
    Yes, and I’m sure I could spell the word ‘book’ when asked, but that doesn’t tell us very much about what the word means for me, how I’m using it, whether the color red is smooth or textured, whether it feels warm or hot or neutral, what shape or tone or saturation it appears within, whether it is still my favorite color.Joshs

    You can say all that publicly, like you just did. But I still don't know how the colour red looks to you.
  • Joshs
    5.7k

    You can say all that publicly, like you just did. But I still don't know how the colour red looks to you.Luke

    I agree you don’t know how it looks to me, but if we are talking about the usefulness of the concept of qualia, the relevant question here is whether I know how it looks to me. That is, whether there is a such a thing as an interpretation and context-independent fact of privately felt sensation, such that when I say I know what red feels like to me, I can demonstrate for myself that it is the ‘same’ felt experience of red as the previous and the time before that. I adhere to constructivist , enactivist, phenomenological and Gibsonian ecological models of perception, that link private sensation to a self-organizing but constantly changing body-environment interaction. Sensations like color are always a new constructive achievement of the whole organism in interaction with its environment .
  • Luke
    2.6k
    I agree you don’t know how it looks to me, but if we are talking about the usefulness of the concept of qualia, the relevant question here is whether I know how it looks to me. That is, whether there is a such a thing as an interpretation and context-independent fact of privately felt sensation.Joshs

    You can't convey the subjective character of "how it looks/feels to me" in language (such that others can know, e.g., how red looks to you), so there's no point in trying. Does this make the concept of qualia useless? It apparently finds its use in philosophical discussions.
  • Banno
    25k
    But I still don't know how the colour red looks to you.Luke

    I agree you don’t know how it looks to me,Joshs

    I'm a bit surprised to see you agree here, Joshs.

    Given that it makes no nevermind, why not just say that there isn't a how-the-colour-red-looks-to-Luke?

    As the millennials say, qualia "is not a thing".

    And that, @noname, is the same as saying qualia don't exist.
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    So let's take "this distinct sensation from my finger tips" and call it "S".

    You might now say: "I have sensation S".

    What is it that has been left out?

    Nothing is left out, since "S" is the name of that sensation, so it includes everything about it...

    As if names were somehow short descriptions.
    Banno

    When encountering "S" I don't actually experience the sensation "S" refers to and therein lies the rub. No?
  • Banno
    25k
    Does it? Why?

    Next time you have the sensation, can you say "ah, that's 'S'"?
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    Does it? Why?

    Next time you have the sensation, can you say "ah, that's 'S'"?
    Banno

    I maybe off track here but naming is not the same as describing. Certain aspects of consciousness though nameable can't be described. So, I may be able to remember the name "S" which I gave to a sensation when I experience it but describing it is an entirely different story, no?
  • Banno
    25k
    For sure. The meaning of a name need not be given by a description.

    SO you have a sensation, and name it "S". Later, you have a sensation and say to yourself "Ah, that's S again..."

    How do you know this second event is a recurrence of S?
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    For sure. The meaning of a name need not be given by a description.

    SO you have a sensation, and name it "S". Later, you have a sensation and say to yourself "Ah, that's S again..."

    How do you know this second event is a recurrence of S?
    Banno

    That all depends on how good my memory is, right? I don't see the relevance though unless you're trying to go Wittgenstein on me. Private language?
  • Banno
    25k
    I don't see the relevance thoughTheMadFool

    A variation on Wittgenstein - yes.
    Let's conduct a little experiment with me as the subject. I'm, as of this moment, typing these words from my keyboard and I get this distinct sensation from my finger tips - it has a certain quality to it - but as I try to put into words this "distinct sensation" I can't seem to do it.TheMadFool
    I'm questioning what it is that makes S a "distinct sensation". How could one know that the second sensation is a recurrence of S?
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