Me, I consider it perfectly normal to lack a precise definition for a philosophical concept. You probably could not define the word "definition" in a way that isn't vague and slippery.... and yet you keep asking for definitions. — Olivier5
Even people like 180 Proof and Banno, who are well educated and sophistacated thinkers in many ways, genuinely don't seem to have the concept. — bert1
You mean "Even people like 180 Proof and @Banno, who are well educated and sophistacated thinkers in many ways, genuinely don't seem to have the concept." — Isaac
Oddly some people seem to struggle with it, almost as if they are zombies. I hesitate to say that as it seems so insulting - people lacking a basic concept of what, in part, they are. Even people like 180 Proof and Banno, who are well educated and sophistacated thinkers in many ways, genuinely don't seem to have the concept. I don't really understand it though, I don't know how people can not have it. — bert1
if we don't share concepts, it's hard to even get a conversation started in which people are not missing each others points. — bert1
Why not? I don't see any prima facie reason why someone ought be 'having an experience' just because they say they are. — Isaac
Some people say they don't use foundational concept X, for instance the concept of "truth", and they truly believe that they do not use the concept, while actually using it just like anybody else. They just use it while remaining unaware that they do. IOW, they simply lie to themselves. — Olivier5
Yes, and in fact, isn't it exactly what we are seeing here, on this and all the other threads on the same subject? — Olivier5
Because I'm not specifying any particular content. There nothing to be wrong about. — bert1
Your claim (as I understand it) is that something is going on in (or around) you, called 'an experience' which is not just neural activity. — Isaac
But the fact that something is happening, you are aware of something happening, whatever it turn out to be, can't be wrong, can it? — bert1
I think it can be. It could be that I receive data, respond to it, then later rationalise that whole event chain as 'an experience' which could be nothing more than a post hoc story about what happened, not an accurate account of what really happened. — Isaac
That's consistent with not having an experience. Is that right? — bert1
Would you happen to know if some computers are able to achieve a scoring of 4:5:6 on the Glasgow coma scale, as of today? — Olivier5
Possibly. They'd need to have eyes, but I don't see any reason they couldn't. — Isaac
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