Well, that's not right, either, it seems. The red of a sunset is very different to the red of a sports car, or the red of a sore eye.red must represent some state of external reality that when manifesting visually becomes “red.” — Mp202020
But if red refers to the experience, then when you say “red” it refers to your experience, but when I say it it refers to my experience. If we are going to be talking about the same thing then we need something that we both have access to. — Banno
If "red" is just in your mind, when you ask for a red pen, how is it that the person you are asking hands you what you want? — Banno
If you can be assured there is radiation, why can't you be sure there's red? — Hanover
The reason a quality like “color” doesn't extend beyond the object is because it is a quality of the object, not the mind. The changes in color within objects and the differences between them are due to changes in the objects themselves, like when a banana turns green to yellow as the chlorophyll breaks down. — NOS4A2
I can be sure that there's red and that there's pain, but given our scientific understanding of physics and biology and psychology, it seems to be that red and pain are properties of minds, not properties of pens and fire.
The issue isn't over whether or not these properties exist, but over where in the world these properties exist. At least when it comes to colour, some appear to be locating them in the wrong place. — Michael
what is an example of a property of the chair that is in the chair itself even if my head (or nobody's head) never existed? — Hanover
Wavelengths travel beyond the objects but the color never does. If the color is determined in part by the wavelength, how is it that if light bounces off an object at a certain wave length, we do not see the color anywhere outside of the object? — NOS4A2
At a certain point on the spectrum, red starts to become orange looking. It becomes more and more orange, eventually becoming a shade of “orange” rather than a shade of “red.” What draws that line? — Mp202020
Your question is misguided. Light stimulates our eyes, signals are sent to our brain, and the brain produces a visual percept with such qualities as shape and colour and depth. Our minds and conscious experiences don't literally extend beyond the body to encompass distal objects.
Then how come the color of the percept isn’t outside the object if the light is outside the object? — NOS4A2
No such thing exists in your head. — NOS4A2
I can take a picture of any object and it will undoubtedly show that it is outside your head — NOS4A2
I don't know what this means. But digital cameras work by measuring the energy of the light that strikes its sensors and uses that to determine which of the red, green, and blue pixels to turn on and at what intensity. Our brains probably work mostly the same way, but with neurons in the visual cortex in lieu of phosphors
It means that if you see a banana, you’re not seeing one in your head. I can record you looking at a banana, the location of both your head and the banana, and discern that nothing about the banana is in your head. — NOS4A2
We’ve examined many brains and discovered no such thing. — NOS4A2
I'm not saying that the banana is in my head. I'm saying that colours are in my head. They are a property of the visual percepts that are produced by activity in the visual cortex.
Sure we have. It's how we make sense of synesthesia, dreams, hallucinations, variations in colour perception, and so on. Visual phenomenology is distinct from distal objects and proximal stimuli. The second and third are often the causal explanation for the first, but that's all there is to it. Yours is the mistaken, naive view that projects the properties of the first onto the second.
Rather, it appears to be a property of the object. — NOS4A2
So while I can’t explain it in terms of naive realism, if it is strictly limited to artificial conditions, I don’t think it suggests phenomenology. — NOS4A2
In particular a stimulus can be perceptually suppressed for seconds or even minutes at a time: the image is projected into one of the observer's eyes but is invisible, not seen. In this manner the neural mechanisms that respond to the subjective percept rather than the physical stimulus can be isolated, permitting visual consciousness to be tracked in the brain.
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In spite of the constant visual stimulus, observers consciously see the horizontal grating alternate every few seconds with the vertical one.
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A number of fMRI experiments ... demonstrate quite conclusively that activity in the upper stages of the ventral pathway ... follow the percept and not the retinal stimulus.
But it's the same distal object and same proximal stimulus, yet a different colour experience. So how does that not suggest phenomenology? Any differences in colour experience must be explained by differences in the body.
Even if you want to say that colours are also properties of mind-independent things, you simply cannot deny that they are (also) properties of mental phenomena. It is the only way to make sense of dreams, hallucinations, and variations in colour perception – all of which are real.
The distal object is a backlit screen, capable of shooting light in all sorts of different directions, or stopping light, sometimes through liquid crystal, etc. it seems to me such conditions can illicit different experiences. The dress itself did not illicit a different experience, as everyone saw it was blue and black upon viewing off the screen. This seems to me to suggest the conditions had much to do with it. — NOS4A2
I can deny that they are properties of mental phenomena because mental phenomena do not exist. Again, nothing of the sort has ever been found, and until they have, it needs to be explained in terms of things that are actually there.
Subjective accounts of states of affairs are limited by the fact that one cannot be aware of what is actually occurring behind his own eyes, or in the brain, at any given moment, so treating them as accurate assessments of the biology seems to me absurd. — NOS4A2
And those conditions are the same for everyone; yet we have different colour experiences. So the point stands, and your comments here are irrelevant.
We have evidence of neural correlates of self-reported visual perception. We have evidence of visual perception caused by direct neural stimulation.
None of what I am saying requires substance or property dualism. I am not saying that mental phenomena is non-physical. I am only saying that colour is a property of mental phenomena and that mental phenomena do not extend beyond the brain. This is perfectly consistent with mental phenomena being reducible to neural activity.
Again, this is the only way to make sense of dreams, hallucinations, synesthesia, and differences in colour perception – all of which are real.
Again, this is the only way to make sense of dreams, hallucinations, synesthesia, and differences in colour perception – all of which are real. — Michael
And it doesn’t happen under different conditions. That something novel occurs in one set of conditions doesn’t mean it applies to all. So using this one example while dismissing the rest is tantamount to pseudoscience. — NOS4A2
We hallucinate and dream, sure, but these are biological acts, not things worthy of their own noun phrase upon which we can ascribe properties. Properties are properties of things, not actions. The body is real, while what the body does is merely an account of what the body is doing from this time and that. — NOS4A2
White and gold or blue and black, for example, is unlikely to be the measurable properties of these objects in the brain. — NOS4A2
Do you really believe that the only way to make sense of dreams, hallucinations, etc is to posit mental phenomena. — Richard B
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