My claim that there can be introspectively indiscernible states from those that give us awareness, yet that do not give us any awareness due to lacking representative contents.
— Bartricks
That's incoherent. Introspection employs self observation and implies self awareness. — InPitzotl
The problem would be if you claim both that they are visually indiscernible and to have visually confirmed which is the real one — InPitzotl
Sure there is. Incidentally, you just quoted my description of why it's incoherent, yet failed to address it.There's nothing incoherent about it. — Bartricks
The visual analogy is not analogous. Van Gogh's can be visually indiscernible from fakes. That has nothing to do with introspection requiring self awareness.Let's use the visual analogy. — Bartricks
If I'm looking at two paint swatches I cannot distinguish, they could possibly be metamers. But to talk about my inability to visually distinguish C from E flat is simply a category error. It's only the former case that distinguishability is an issue; the latter case is more fundamental.Similarly, the claim that two mental states - one a genuine state of awareness and the other not - can be introspectively indiscernible... — Bartricks
The problem would be if you claim both that they are visually indiscernible and to have visually confirmed which is the real one — InPitzotl
...what are you objecting to? The bolded part of your response certainly does not align with the bolded part of the thing you replied to.Similarly, the claim that two mental states - one a genuine state of awareness and the other not - can be introspectively indiscernible is not equivalent to the claim that those two states are indiscernible tout court, is it? — Bartricks
You are mocking yourself. You're referring to the use of careful reasoning in your response to my post, and you have completely failed to notice what the objections were. If this is supposed to indicate how good your argument is, then you must be completely failing to address your premise analogously to your complete failure to understand the post you just replied to.And we can also know, by the kind of careful reasoning that I have engaged in above — Bartricks
Thanks for directly addressing the matter. I found this defense of the premise to be much more coherent and informative.There is no contradiction because a faculty and what it gives one an awareness of are distinct. For example, if my eyelids are sealed shut then I still have a faculty of sight, but it is now impotent to make me aware of anything. I have sight, but I am unable to see. — Bartricks
The value placed on a discussion is subjective I suppose. It may be pointless if you have a belief already established and this is an effort at rationalizing it.But like I say, this is pointless quibbling. — Bartricks
Your analysis of my argument is wrong. — Bartricks
if you are correct, your argument is impossible. I wish I could help. — Cheshire
It's the same essential objection as the one three days ago.Utter nonsense. — Bartricks
Okay, but why is this too tedious for words now? You've spent 10 replies on this:This is now too tedious for words. — Bartricks
Indeed. I think everything you've said is a load of Pollocks. — Bartricks
It's the same essential objection as the one three days ago. — InPitzotl
↪Bartricks Does your "theory" take into account the most recent discovery of a human species more closely related to humanity than Neanderthals? No, it was released today. Do you see the issue? Fact/Researched based evolution is always catching up with itself; but you presuppose an entire understanding of unknown information, then "deduce" the effects of a change to it. It can't be done under any logical framework. Did God effect evolution? Dunno, too many variables. Imposing an anthropic framework over a reverse inductive argument with the confidence of an eye surgeon denotes mistakes were made. Handle it. — Cheshire
1. If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not give us an awareness of anything
2. Our faculties of awareness do provide us with some awareness of something
3. Therefore our faculties of awareness are not wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces — Bartricks
This really confuses you? I'm aware that I have thoughts. Whether or not the thoughts are awareness, being aware of thoughts is in and of itself awareness (of thoughts).You just keep saying that there is something incoherent in the idea of, well, what? Two mental states that are introspectively indiscernible, but one of which is a state of awareness and the other not? — Bartricks
Sure. If I genuinely see a cup, there's a cup there. If I hallucinate a cup, there typically isn't a cup there.Well, there's quite a big difference between a case of hallucination and a case of veridical perception. — Bartricks
That's not where the incoherency lies. "Introspective indiscernibility" is perfectly coherent. What's incoherent is the suggestion that you can introspect about something without awareness.So I don't think your objection can really be that the notion of introspective indiscernibility is incoherent, for it just so plainly isn't. — Bartricks
You have implied there exist such a thing asI have literally no idea what you're on about. Here's my argument from the OP: — Bartricks
or guided evolutionary forces which is implied. Then supposed you could know the difference one or the other would have on human cognition. Essentially stating, because things are the way they are I am correct. But, you take a step further and pretend to know how they would be different. The nature of an evolutionary system sort of disallows the ability to make that claim with confidence. Agree or disagree aside, do you understand my complaint?unguided evolutionary forces — Bartricks
This really confuses you? I'm aware that I have thoughts. Whether or not the thoughts are awareness, being aware of thoughts is in and of itself awareness (of thoughts). — InPitzotl
But both require having a percept. — InPitzotl
That's not where the incoherency lies. "Introspective indiscernibility" is perfectly coherent. What's incoherent is the suggestion that you can introspect about something without awareness. — InPitzotl
Note too that to say two states are introspectively indiscernible, is not to suppose that there is someone who is failing introspectively to discern them. You seem to think it does suppose that (Christ knows why - that's like thinking that the claim there can be a visually indiscernible Sunflowers painting that is not by Van Gogh supposes that there is someone who is visually failing to discern them). — Bartricks
Sure. If I genuinely see a cup, there's a cup there. If I hallucinate a cup, there typically isn't a cup there.
But both require having a percept. — InPitzotl
But a hallucination is not a belief; it is a fictive percept. A person with Charles Bonnet Syndrome (CBS) for example experiences hallucinations, but does not confuse the hallucinated objects with real objects (which is a giant problem for you; they introspectively distinguish the reality of their percepts). They do, however, have fictive percepts.No. A belief is not a percept. Yet if I believe I am perceiving something, then my situation is introspectively indiscernible from what it would be if I was in fact perceiving something. — Bartricks
...you must be confused about hallucinations.You are confused. Not me. You. — Bartricks
That's not where the incoherency lies. "Introspective indiscernibility" is perfectly coherent. (A) What's incoherent is the suggestion that you can introspect about something without awareness. — InPitzotl
Why don't you actually read what I take the trouble to write? (B) I addressed this stupid and irrelevant point earlier. Here: — Bartricks
(D) is wrong; I think no such thing. (A) does not imply (C) is wrong. Therefore, (B) is wrong; (B) does not address (A), (B) addresses your confusion about (A).(C)Note too that to say two states are introspectively indiscernible, is not to suppose that there is someone who is failing introspectively to discern them. (D)You seem to think it does suppose that — Bartricks
(D) is wrong; I think no such thing. (A) does not imply (C) is wrong. Therefore, (B) is wrong; (B) does not address (A), (B) addresses your confusion about (A). — InPitzotl
The problem is that introspection in and of itself presupposes awareness just as vision in and of itself presupposes sight. — InPitzotl
Apparently so. You're just now grasping that I'm not talking about what you fantasized I was.Oh, that's soooo clear. — Bartricks
That is incoherent. It's a tangled mess. There's no such thing as a faculty of introspection incapable of generating states of awareness. Without introspection, there's no such thing as introspective discernibility/indiscernibility in the first place.if no one has a faculty of introspection capable of generating any states of awareness, that is entirely compatible with there existing mental states that are introspectively indiscernible from states of awareness. — Bartricks
Nonsense. I don't think such a thing... it's incoherent.So that's what you think, given you have just said that D is wrong. — Bartricks
Mostly this one.Nope, still haven't a clue what you're saying. The OP starts by presenting a syllogism. Which premise are you trying to take issue with? — Bartricks
What is an unguided evolutionary force? Secular evolution?If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not give us an awareness of anything — Bartricks
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