Some experts back home dispute whether color could actually be a conscious sensation. — Marchesk
Everyone should go up the river at least once in their life. — James Riley
Everyone should go up the river at least once in their life. — James Riley
Alien scientists certainly know about electromagnetic radiation. I doubt there would be any controversy about animals being able to sense different frequencies. Some animals can echolocate or sense magnetic or electric fields and we don't think that's hard to believe. — T Clark
The controversy would be over color sensation, not the physics of EM radiation. Same problem we have when discussing bat sonar sensation, except bats have no language to name it for us.
Mary's species wouldn't know anything about color the same way we don't know anything about whatever sensation bats have when experiencing sonar. — Marchesk
Some philosophers would say that if she studied and observed enough to be able to use terms of color and seeing appropriately then she would know what it means to see and to see color. Is that pragmatism? It makes sense to me. — T Clark
So you're saying if a bat could talk sonar, we would understand it? — Marchesk
If you mean if a bat could talk sonar that we could pick up on our equipment in an actual language expressing concepts, perceptions, and feelings, I don't see why not. — T Clark
So you think learning bat language would give us sonar sensations? — Marchesk
Maybe we should publish it. — Marchesk
The thought that humans experience the entire range of conscious experience is silly. Surely there are sensations we have no idea about. — Marchesk
She just doesn't know she's wearing red, or that the Matrix code is green. — Marchesk
But bats may experience sonar in a way that's entirely different from any of our sensations. It's just an example. — Marchesk
Surely there are sensations we have no idea about. — Marchesk
Isn't that a problem for physicalism? — Marchesk
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