So positing an "inversion" of color qualia may not actually establish a difference in phenomenal experience - it may just be describing a difference in linguistic labeling habits. In the end, it may not even make sense to talk about "experiencing the qualia of red" — Matripsa
Unlike other sensory modalities, our experience of color is deeply intertwined with linguistic labeling practices from the start. — Matripsa
we may just be experiencing the qualia of what is agreed upon or linguistically coded to be "red" within a particular cultural/linguistic framework. — Matripsa
But if receiving a certain exact wavelength (termed Red, rather than the valence of it's presentation to an S being termed Red) causes a different phenomenal experience in two individuals who do not differ in their hardware (colour-blindness) then I think the argument is still live. — AmadeusD
Is anything we experince non-physical? Can we demonstrate there is anything outside of brain states, physical processes? Asking for a friend. — Tom Storm
They are non-physical properties of experience, even if there is a correlated brain-state. This does not demonstrate that the experience is physical. — AmadeusD
That is, unless you take the entirety of phenomenal experience as an evolutionarily-required post-hoc sense-making program — AmadeusD
So Alice and Mark both experience the same qualia of "green", but Alice has a different label for it, so when they look at "green", Mark says that's green, Alice says that's blue, and yet they both see the same color and are having the same qualia experience. Anyway, not sure where to go with that, I just wanted to show that our experience of color is inherently intertwined with language and it should somehow be a part of the argument or at least mentioned.
Anyway, I'm certainly no expert, — Matripsa
In one of my recent classes, we discussed the famous "inverted qualia" argument against physicalism about consciousness. For those unfamiliar, it posits a scenario where two individuals (Alice and Mark) have qualitative experiences that are systematically inverted relative to each other (e.g. what feels like "red" to Alice feels like "green" to Mark), despite being physical/functional duplicates. — Matripsa
So Alice and Mark both experience the same qualia of "green", but Alice has a different label for it, so when they look at "green", Mark says that's green, Alice says that's blue, and yet they both see the same color and are having the same qualia experience. — Matripsa
This is meant to show that qualia (the subjective feel of experiences) cannot be accounted for purely by physical/functional properties, as Alice and Bob's qualitative states differ while their physical states are identical by premise. — Matripsa
But are you satisfied that it demonstrates the experience is non-physical? How would we demonstrate that conscious experience reflects a non-physical reality? Isn't it an inference based on a lack of data or knowledge? — Tom Storm
what is your explanation of consciousness? — Tom Storm
This is meant to show that qualia (the subjective feel of experiences) cannot be accounted for purely by physical/functional properties, as Alice and Bob's qualitative states differ while their physical states are identical by premise.
— Matripsa
Seems like it assumes the thing it's meant to prove. Seems circular to me. — flannel jesus
qualia (the subjective feel of experiences) cannot be accounted for purely by physical/functional properties — Matripsa
Alice and Bob's qualitative states differ while their physical statesare identical — Matripsa
How so? — 180 Proof
I do not see anything wrong with your passage being (rightly, a rehash of the quoted from M) totally sound. — AmadeusD
You're essentially asserting a no true scotsman here — AmadeusD
While this is obviously nominally true, It cannot be the case that an open-ended "well something is likely prove it wrong, sometime, somewhere, for some reason" is a valid argument, or defeater. It is self-effacing speculation. — AmadeusD
Or can we - demonstrate - that certain things are almost certain, despite further discovery clearly being able to debunk that position? — AmadeusD
Otherwise, I don't think anyone saying they have a clue is being honest with themselves so i largely refrain from even speculating. — AmadeusD
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