Joseph Lynch         
         
MarcheskAccepted Answer         
         
NotAristotle         
         
RogueAI         
         
Michael         
         Doesn't semantic externalism require some kind of distinguishability? — NotAristotle
NotAristotle         
         
Michael         
         
Michael         
         
Michael         
         But he assumes that we are not BiV in proving it. — NotAristotle
NotAristotle         
         
NOS4A2         
         It seems to me that having an experience of eating pizza cannot be simulated. That is because my experience of reality requires more than BiV, it requires sensory organs that can experience the reality. The proof is in the pudding, or in this case, the pizza. I think that if you remove the sensory abilities of the organism, you remove phenomenal consciousness too, or at least you remove the phenomenal consciousness of what is sensed. Experience is a more integrated process than just brain processing, in my opinion.
Michael         
         
NotAristotle         
         The assumption that the body only keeps the brain alive and does not factor into phenomenal experience is a materialist form of dualism that ought to be dismissed as nonsense. — NOS4A2
Michael         
         The assumption that the body only keeps the brain alive and does not factor into phenomenal experience is a materialist form of dualism that ought to be dismissed as nonsense. — NOS4A2
NotAristotle         
         
Michael         
         And you'd be like, "a real tree is not a BiV tree." But of course you'd be assuming that the tree you were pointing to was not a BiV tree. And that's the problem. There's no reason that you, the scientist, are not also a brain in a vat. The semantic externalism argument against BiV only goes through by assuming not BiV. — NotAristotle
NotAristotle         
         The point still stands that if semantic externalism is true then none of the words in the brain’s language can refer to the vat. — Michael
It’s a real tree given what “real tree” means in my language. — Michael
NotAristotle         
         
Michael         
         I agree with you, but that's different than saying that if semantic externalism is true then we cannot be brains in a vat. — NotAristotle
NOS4A2         
         If you prefer, consider instead a body in a vat. It’s the same principle. This person never sees trees, only “hallucinations”, but if the causal theory of reference is true then none of the words in its language can refer to (real) trees.
Michael         
         To be the same principle the body would in some way need to be silenced, or asleep, or unconscious, as in the movie Matrix. — NOS4A2
NOS4A2         
         Sure. The point is that its experiences are elicited artificially by a computer directly manipulating the sense organs.
It never sees a tree or a brain or a vat and as such no words in its language can refer to these things.
NotAristotle         
         To be the same principle the body would in some way need to be silenced, or asleep, or unconscious, as in the movie Matrix. — NOS4A2
Sure. The point is that its experiences are elicited artificially by a computer directly manipulating the sense organs. — Michael
Michael         
         If the person is awake, they are aware that they are BiV. — NotAristotle
Michael         
         But wouldn't he be referring directly to the light and the patterns, even if he mistook them for a real tree? — NOS4A2
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