point still holds. You can look at a reflection of your eyes but you don't see yourself seeing. You only see. — Wayfarer
The eyes, in this analagy, stands for consciousness. The eyes seeing themselves (in a reflection) would correspond to consciosuness examining itself. That's what the hard problem is about - consciousness being inaccessible. However, I can access my own consciousness and check if it's only physical.
To see the eye seeing itself = to be conscious of consciousness conscious of consciousness (itself), is a different, higher order, matter altogether, no? — TheMadFool
You're making it more complicated than it is. The fact that the eye can't see itself is very simple, isn't it? I can reflect on myself, I can think about what I think, but this problem of reflexivity remains, because, as I said, the subject of who thinks is not an object, except for by inference. Let's not lose sight of the wood for the trees. Have a look at the two refs I gave the paragraph starting 'It has been remarked....' — Wayfarer
If any problem qualifies as the problem of consciousness, it is this one. In this central sense of "consciousness", an organism is conscious if there is something it is like to be that organism, and a mental state is conscious if there is something it is like to be in that state.
— David Chalmers, Facing up to the Hard Problem
As it happens, and even though I agree with the thrust of this, I think it could be explained better. Where Chalmers uses the term 'experience', I think the correct word to use is 'being'. What he's saying is that no purely objective account of the mind is the same as 'the nature of experience'; describing an experience is not the same as having an experience. And the capacity for experience is unique to beings, who are the subjects of experience (even very simple beings, but not inorganic nature - this is not panpsychism). — Wayfarer
I can reflect on myself, I can think about what I think, but this problem of reflexivity remains, because, as I said, the subject who thinks is not an object, except for by inference. — Wayfarer
We know God through His effects, the reality of physical existence, but we cannot see Him directly as the cause, His existence is inferred. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, but I wonder whether the subject itself is much more than a trick. — Tom Storm
.doesn’t say much more than evolution is a natural occurrence. — Mww
Yes, but I wonder whether the subject itself is much more than a trick. :razz: But this does seem unlikely. — Tom Storm
This is why the physicalist who sees everything from the perspective of empirical knowledge, without inverting that knowledge to make it fully logical, i.e. consistent with the rational mind, will think that the idealist, or dualist has everything backward. — Metaphysician Undercover
The subject of the categories cannot, therefore, for the very reason that it cogitates these, frame any conception of itself as an object of the categories. — Mww
I can reflect on myself, I can think about what I think, but this problem of reflexivity remains, because, as I said, the subject who thinks is not an object, except for by inference. — Wayfarer
But if we gain enough knowledge via quantum neuroscience to describe the substance of subjectivity as object, — Enrique
Building a violin is not a matter of having enough bricks. You can't build a violin from bricks. — Wayfarer
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