are you claiming "what is it like to go sky-diving?" is something that needs to be eliminated? Or is nonsensical? — RogueAI
it is misconceived to suppose that one can circumscribe, let alone define, conscious experience in terms of there being something which it is like for a subject to have it. It does not matter whether ‘conscious experience’ is understood as ‘experience had while conscious’ or as ‘experience of which one is conscious’. The very expression ‘There is something it is like for a person to have it’ is malconstructed. The question from which it is derived ‘What is (or was) it like for you (or for A) to V?’ is a perfectly licit request for specification of one’s affective attitude at the time to the experience undergone, a specification of ‘how it is (or was) for one’. If there is an answer, then there is something which it is (or was) for you (or A) to V —namely ... (and here comes a specification of the attitudinal attribute). — Hacker
The idea of consciousness as 'something it's like', is the notion that there's an existent thing (what it's like) on top of the goings on in the brain that constitute the experience of doing something. It's that notion that I'm eliminativist about. I don't think it has any proper referent. — Isaac
Eliminative materialism exists due to the fact that the intrinsically subjective nature of conscious experience or existence, is out-of-scope for objective explanation as a matter of principle.
— Wayfarer
No. This is taking the way the world seems to you to be the way the world actually is. It seems to you as if consciousness was intrinsically subjective, it does not seem that way to others. Eliminative materialism doesn't agree with you about the intrinsic subjectivity and then rule it out of scope. It disagrees with you about the intrinsic subjectivity (or about it's nature, anyway).
This was the whole point I was making in the other thread. You claim that conscious experience is intrinsically subjective as a fact about what is the case. Yet you've derived this 'fact' by introspection alone...using your conscious experience of existence...the very thing you just argued was intrinsically subjective...So how exactly does it deliver you facts about the world which you can claim apply to others. It's just your story, the way things seem to you to be. It's not a description of the way the world is because, as 'science' has proven, measurements of the way the world is are observer dependant. — Isaac
My brain neither gains mass nor increases in volume. Ergo, my thought about Aphrodite isn't matter! — TheMadFool
The brain (I don't know about mind) ABSOLUTELY gains in mass and volume just as with any other organ. Stuff (blood, chemicals, nutrients, etc, etc,) go in and out of the brain constantly. The only dispute is how appreciable/measurable the changes are. The brain consumes energy (chemical/biological) in its functionality. Therefore, at different times it has different energy levels. — BrianW
Surely there is a subject of experience. The brain doesn't experience anything, unless it is embodied. The reality of the subject of experience is what is at issue. — Wayfarer
the being, the subject of experience, doesn't have a referent *because* it's not objectively describable — Wayfarer
It's what must first exist in order for there to be any facts about the world. — Wayfarer
Notice that when you say 'it seems to you that ...', this statement assumes there must be a subject to whom something 'seems' to be the case. There can't be a seeming, without someone to whom it seems. — Wayfarer
That's the fatal flaw in all Dennett's blatherings about 'unconscious competence'. — Wayfarer
the first-person perspective is dismissed as being 'just a story', even though that perspective is required for there to be a story in the first place. Again, a glaring contradiction. — Wayfarer
it is an obvious mistake is to classify your first-person existence as 'a fact about the world'. It is not 'a fact about the world' at all. It's what must first exist in order for there to be any facts about the world. — Wayfarer
the being, the subject of experience, doesn't have a referent *because* it's not objectively describable
— Wayfarer
Yet...
It's what must first exist in order for there to be any facts about the world.
— Wayfarer
...sounds exactly like a description of it which is purporting to be objective. — Isaac
If that necessity is not a fact about the world then what is it a fact about? — Isaac
No, not objective. But real! — Wayfarer
If that necessity is not a fact about the world then what is it a fact about? — Isaac
Something you're obviously having a great deal of trouble seeing. That is what this Aeon essay is about. As said, it's the substance of Descartes' famous argument, 'cogito ergo sum'. — Wayfarer
There's 'objective' as in 'true for everyone' and there's 'objective' as in true in the absence of a subject. For me they're indistinguishable — Isaac
as 'science' has proven, measurements of the way the world is are observer dependant. — Isaac
The transcendental realist therefore represents outer appearances...as things in themselves, which would exist independently of us and our sensibility and thus would also be outside us according to pure concepts of the understanding. — Kant, CPR A369
So "not objective. But real" doesn't make any sense as a claim. — Isaac
The transcendental idealist, on the contrary, can be an empirical realist, hence, as he is called, a dualist, i.e., he can concede the existence of matter without going beyond mere self-consciousness and assuming something more than the certainty of representations in me, hence the cogito ergo sum. For because he allows this matter and even its inner possibility to be valid only for appearance– which, separated from our sensibility, is nothing –matter for him is only a species of representations (intuition), which are call external, not as if they related to objects that are external in themselves but because they relate perceptions to space, where all things are external to one another, but that space itself is in us. — Kant CPR A370
If it's not a fact about the world then what is it a fact about? Shouldn't require an essay to answer. — Isaac
Whatever is true 'in the absence of a subject' is by definition unknown. In fact I'm going to call into question that there is a domain of facts that exist in the absence of any subject. — Wayfarer
what you're appealing to as 'objective in the absence of any subject' is just the common-sense view that the world is real independent of any act of observation. — Wayfarer
what is the nature of mathematical reasoning? What of the inner processes of judgement, that we use all the time to arrive at conclusions about the nature of things? I don't see that, and many other facets of reason, as being empirical in nature. — Wayfarer
There is an enormous volume of literature on just these kinds of questions. Many books have been written on it. — Wayfarer
Honestly, hand-on-heart, not trying to be confrontational or condescending, there really is something you're not seeing in this argument. What it takes is a kind of shift of perspective, something like a gestalt shift. — Wayfarer
You do realize that what you're saying is words are a waste of time, don't you? I'll leave you with that to ponder upon. — TheMadFool
Sure it's a waste ... But do you really think that I am going to ponder on something that a Mad Fool tells me? — Alkis Piskas
Outstanding dialogue, you guys. Well done. — Mww
Asking what it's like to sky dive is asking for my affect at the time, the answer is "It was great", or "it was really scary". Asking what it's like to be a bat is not intending such an answer. Nagel would not be satisfied with "it'd be fun", or "it'd be boring". — Isaac
You don't know what it's like to be you? — RogueAI
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