With experience, on the other hand, physical explanation of the functions is not in question. The key is instead the conceptual point that the explanation of functions does not suffice for the explanation of experience. This basic conceptual point is not something that further neuroscientific investigation will affect. In a similar way, experience is disanalogous to the élan vital. The vital spirit was put forward as an explanatory posit, in order to explain the relevant functions, and could therefore be discarded when those functions were explained without it. Experience is not an explanatory posit but an explanandum in its own right, and so is not a candidate for this sort of elimination. — Chalmers, Facing Up to the Problem of Consciousness
I read Chalmers as breaking from the Cartesian theater where the duality of a first person being separated from the rest of the movie is the explanation itself. ..The question is not whether we are only physical beings but whether the methods to establish what is only physical will explain experience. Chalmers is introducing a duality that is recognized through the exclusion of a phenomena instead of accepting the necessity for an agency beyond phenomena. — Paine
Other people cannot be said to learn of my sensations only from my behaviour — for I cannot be said to learn of them. I have them.
This much is true: it makes sense to say about other people that they doubt whether I am in pain; but not to say it about myself. — Wittgenstein, PI 246
you can't follow a simple argument there's little point continuing. try reading what I've written rather than arguing against what you think I probably wrote. — Isaac
If we're not describing some.empirical object (or event) then it would be weird if some empirical objects matched up with it exactly. The 'hard problem' would emerge if there was a one-to-one correspondence. Then we'd have something odd to explain. That it doesn't is exactly what we'd expect. It's not even an easy problem, its not a problem at all. — Isaac
I'm not looking to do a deep dive on what Isaac thinks because I'd probably bump my head on the bottom of the pool — frank
? Are we supposed to reason towards what elevates our self esteem and makes us feel good? Rather than towards the truth?the aspect of phenomenality cannot be all that significant — Joshs
is experience and intentionality on the contrary intimately connected? — Joshs
Doubt necessarily implies a sentient, self-conscious entity holding it. Doubt is a thinking process. If you do not agree with this, then what is doubt to you?How does doubt logically imply a sentient, self-conscious entity holding it? What logical steps form that implication? Perhaps you could render it in classical notation, that might help. — Isaac
It basically concludes that communication is always a matter of pointing to facets of your audience's experience. — frank
There could be cases where experience varies significantly, as with people with aphantasia, but knowledge of that implies some commonality in order to communicate it. — frank
As for "internal". I just don't understand what it's supposed to be internal to. My skull? — frank
Doubt necessarily implies a sentient, self-conscious entity holding it. Doubt is a thinking process. If you do not agree with this, then what is doubt to you? — Caldwell
he focused upon how the conflict of methods developed to establish facts beyond personal experience came to be used to explain that phenomena itself — Paine
If communication requires common experiential ground, this seems to rather imply the privacy of experience. If experience were communicable, then the relevant experiential background could be communicated. — hypericin
Aphantasia is kind of a special case. Our experience of our inner world echoes our experience of the outer world. Our inner monologue echoes the sound of us (or someone) talking, and our inner visualization echo (faintly,to be sure, for most) the experience of seeing. — hypericin
Experience is only revealed from the internal, first-person perspective. That is, to the organism. — hypericin
Hard determinism has worked well for the natural sciences , but it isn’t such a great fit for elucidating psychological processes such as intentionality, mental illness, motivation, affectivity, empathy and learning. — Joshs
But my course and method, as I have often clearly stated and would wish to state again, is this--not to extract works from works or experiments from experiments (as an empiric), but from works and experiments to extract causes and axioms, and again from those causes and axioms new works and experiments, as a legitimate interpreter of nature. — Francis Bacon, The New Organon, Book 1, 67
What part of the psyche doesn't fit with epiphenomenalism? I mean, when does freedom of the will become necessary to understanding? — frank
↪Joshs A few things struck me as odd. Why does epiphenomenalism "threaten"?
So what if
the aspect of phenomenality cannot be all that significant
— Joshs
? Are we supposed to reason towards what elevates our self esteem and makes us feel good? Rather than towards the truth? — hypericin
Sure, all biology is ultimately reducible to molecules bouncing around, but you won't get anywhere trying to describe it in those terms.
I don't need to. Go ahead if you could do so. I'm asking if you had any doubts as to what I just said, then you were already demonstrating what you purported to deny. Simple. It's not hard to understand this.Well they set it out. Set out the logical implication in one of the standard forms of logical notation so we can check its validity. — Isaac
Epiphenomenalism asserts that metal events are caused by physical events in the brain, — Joshs
Enactivist approaches to cognition informed by phenomenological philosophy reject this ‘mind-mind’ split. — Joshs
The fact that we share a common experiential ground stems from the fact that we share a common world, as well as a common neurology. Nonetheless I cannot look through your eyes, as you cannot mine. We can never know what it would actually be like, if we could.Well... it's that we couldn't communicate all without any preceding common ground. — frank
I think Chalmers is including all of that as phenomenal consciousness, of the outer world and the realm of imagination. — frank
Would you agree that the third person view is a construction? — frank
When we observe anything in the world, we are observing it from a third person perspective. That is a component of our first person perspective, what it is like to be us. — hypericin
There isn't any phenomenal aspect to the third person account. It's the God's eye view. — frank
Tommy squirmed in the hard plastic chair, suffocating in the reek of recent flatulence which pervaded the office. The principal's voice was a drone, a distant second to the large red birthmark on the principal's forehead in the competition for Tommy's attention.
When you say: "There isn't any phenomenal aspect to the third person account, that is to ignore the role of paying attention to phenomena has in moving toward that prize of objectivity. One can recognize the difference without pitting them against each other in a zero-sum game. — Paine
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