To me the issue is not about the denial of sensation but rather about its status. We seem to understand sensation (the 'what it's like to see red') as radically private. At the same time we thoughtlessly assume that of course we all have access to the 'same' redness. — hanaH
he unspoken logic seems to be that the same-enough hardware should provide the same-enough radically-private-experience-stuff. But whence this 'should'? Anything that's radically private by definition is seemingly outside the purview of logic and science, by definition. — hanaH
I would argue that sensation is somewhat radically private, in that we never fully know what it's like to be someone else. Only what their behavior and words tell us, and to the extent that our projection or simulation of their minds is accurate. Which often enough, it's not. — Marchesk
There are sensations unknowable to science. We only know the human ones because we have them. Otherwise, humans would be like bats, to an alien or AI science lacking those sensations. — Marchesk
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