First, are you saying that the Swampman scenario is nomologically impossible, or just less probable than something else? — SophistiCat
The thought experiment seems to want to ask how you can represent experience without having experience. I don't see how a description of anything could usurp experience. — Andrew4Handel
But I don't think it will help us to do so. Very few 'Why' questions have answers. — andrewk
Being able to remember and recognize red sounds like knowledge. We do use "know" to mean experiential in addition to propositional knowledge. — Marchesk
I was thinking of the identity of those mental states. I feel like I have a persistent identity (being the same person I was a minute ago, despite a different physical state back then, and being the same person I was when I was 4, despite a nearly complete lack of the original matter of which I was then composed). So how am I not already swampman? What has happened in that thought-experiment that has not happened to me? All that's missing is an unverifiable causal connection between the one version of 'me' and the present state. — noAxioms
Sure, but the issue is that it seems like language can describe most of the world in scientific terms — Marchesk
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.