Namely, the mind can encapsulate the sum total of what space 'feels' like, what sound, 'sounds' like (ever hear music in a dream as if played on a device; but, in a dream), and what food 'tastes' like.
Yet, these, feelings, sounds, and tastes are not entirely qualia. They are actual experiences, reified through the brain's hardware into a phenomenological experience that can be what is called 'dreaming'.
It is intriguing that when one experiences these amalgamates of past experiences that is what one would call a 'qualia'. — Shawn
How does one express this in terms of knowledge and language? — Shawn
When you say "these amalgamates of past experiences", are you referring to dreams? If so, then you have already told us that these "are not entirely qualia". — Luke
Yes — Shawn
I wouldn't consider that an experience on top of another experience; it's just part of the dream experience. There is something it is like to have a dream, just as there is something it is like to listen to Mozart in reality. This is the distinction I would draw between the two qualia or qualitative experiences. — Luke
The mind has the extraordinary capacity to encapsulate the totality of the world in a realistic manner.
Namely, the mind can encapsulate the sum total of what space 'feels' like, what sound, 'sounds' like (ever hear music in a dream as if played on a device; but, in a dream), and what food 'tastes' like. — Shawn
Yet, these, feelings, sounds, and tastes are not entirely qualia. They are actual experiences, reified through the brain's hardware into a phenomenological experience — Shawn
What an intriguing way to describe 'dreaming'.It is intriguing that when one experiences these amalgamates of past experiences that is what one would call a 'qualia'. — Shawn
Everything in a dream is qualitative in manner to be more clear, with the observer or subject further experiences these qualia... — Shawn
I wouldn't consider that an experience on top of another experience; it's just part of the dream experience. There is something it is like to have a dream, just as there is something it is like to listen to Mozart in reality. This is the distinction I would draw between the two qualia or qualitative experiences. — Luke
Yes, dreams have a phenomenological, qualitative aspect (in my experience). — Luke
I am not sure I understand the process of how experiences are 'reified through the brain's hardware'.
Help me out here ? — Amity
It's fascinating to me to witness other people as if with a separate mind in a dream. What do you think? — Shawn
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