To me, the difference at hand is about actually eating an apple, and describing/analyzing/explaining the eating of an apple.An ontological distinction means there’s a difference in kind. But these distinctions were discarded along with many other elements of Aristotelianism by modern science, which tends to try and explain everything in terms of matter-energy. Nagel elaborates his point in more detail in his 2012 book Mind and Cosmos where he says that:
The physical sciences can describe organisms like ourselves as parts of the objective spatio-temporal order – our structure and behavior in space and time – but they cannot describe the subjective experiences of such organisms or how the world appears to their different particular points of view. There can be a purely physical description of the neurophysiological processes that give rise to an experience, and also of the physical behavior that is typically associated with it, but such a description, however complete, will leave out the subjective essence of the experience – how it is from the point of view of its subject — without which it would not be a conscious experience at all.
So the physical sciences, in spite of their extraordinary success in their own domain, necessarily leave an important aspect of nature unexplained. — Wayfarer
Any account of consciousness has to account for its moral implications. — baker
In the absence of a binding system of morality, concepts such as "consciousness" have to carry the moral load. — baker
A taking for granted of another being's identity, ie. that is has an identity, that it is an entity with some permanent characteristics, that there is a continuity to it. One such is taken for granted, it makes sense to talk of "what it's like to be a bat". — baker
To me, the difference at hand is about actually eating an apple, and describing/analyzing/explaining the eating of an apple.
Which is better, more relevant? To eat an apple, or to describe/analyze/explain the eating of an apple? — baker
What does it mean to say a bat has an identity? That the bat knows who it is? That Baker knows it is a bat? What is it you think is taken for granted? — Banno
To me, the difference at hand is about actually eating an apple, and describing/analyzing/explaining the eating of an apple. — baker
Are we doing physics? Then it makes sense to talk about matter and energy and particles and so on; but i don't think there is much mention of "substance" in either cosmology or quantum physics. Or are we doing theory of action, in which case we might talk of intention and agency, and make no mention of substance. Or are we talking about phenomenology, in which case presumably we would talk about appearances, and perhaps substance would make an appearance there....there is only one substance... — Wayfarer
On the other hand, knowing what it is like to be be another human is another matter. — jgill
Experience is a subjective thing. — RogueAI
When you unpack "1. A bat experiences the world when it uses echolocation.", you're saying there's an experiencer (the bat), and it has experiences. — RogueAI
Those experiences are therefore the bat's subjective experiences. — RogueAI
If you're not a dualist, and you believe experiences are real, how are they real? — RogueAI
Not if subjective means "in the mind" as opposed to "in the world" which in this context is a Cartesian distinction, not an ordinary or natural distinction.
You don't believe experiences happen in the mind? If not, then where? In the world? If so, then specifically where in the world do experiences (or experiencing, if you prefer) happen? The brain? — RogueAI
Suppose that I see a red tomato, do I then experience a red tomato in my brain? Is this experience a neural state of my brain? Saying so is incoherent, for there is no such thing as experiencing a red tomato in my brain. It does not make sense to answer the question where I experience the red tomato by saying: ‘Here’, while pointing to my head (as opposed to pointing at the fruit in the garden). Similarly, it can not be said that the hippocampus is the locus of remembering, for an answer to the question ‘Where and when did you remember that …?’ is given by saying: ‘While I was in the library’; not by saying: ‘In my hippocampus; where else?’. — Seven Misconceptions About the Mereological Fallacy: A Compilation for the Perplexed - Harry Smit & Peter M. S. Hacker, 2013
The being.It's not clear what is going on here. What does it mean to say a bat has an identity? That the bat knows who it is? That Baker knows it is a bat? What is it you think is taken for granted? — Banno
This is moot, because if one assumes that something doesn't have an identity, then one also assumes that it doesn't/cannot feel pain to begin with.Suppose the bat does not have an identity - that that make it OK to inflict pain on it?
Of course. Consider, for example, works of art or craftsmanship, or even just ordinary cars: these things have an identity attributed to them, with a unique serial number. And while there are generally not assumed to be able to feel pain, there is a big issue when it comes to damaging them.If identity is attributed, then can't it be attributed to a tree or a rock?
Without an identity, they wouldn't be eligible for moral standing.So do they have moral standing because they have an identity?
I was refering to this:I think you've failed to see the point. — Wayfarer
So the physical sciences, in spite of their extraordinary success in their own domain, necessarily leave an important aspect of nature unexplained. — Wayfarer
Sure.An 'ontological distinction' means 'a difference in kind'. I'm saying, there are differences in kind between mineral, organic, sentient and rational beings. In old-school philosophical parlance, they're different substances. Whereas the general consensus is, I believe, that there is only one substance, that being matter (now, matter~energy) and that organic, sentient, and rational beings are simply permutations of this single substance. That is what I'm calling into question.
Daniel Dennett is its poster-boy, but it’s a very widespread failing in modern philosophy. — Wayfarer
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