On this view you're advocating for, you're clearly stating that there is no difference between seeing, hallucinating, and dreaming. — creativesoul
What are we to make of this? Will we be good scientists and acknowledge the theory falsified, because Subject 1001 reports that they see blue? Or are we going to say instead that Subject 1001 is mistaken? — Banno
Then you render your position unfalsifiable? Or you classify Subject 1001 as abnormal?
You see, it's not only about biomechanics because it involves the subject's report. This is the bit that goes unrecognised in the "mental percept" account. — Banno
That is, it seems to me that the question is about the use of the word "red" rather than about the appearance of red. — Banno
But, you raise another point and that is if stimulation of V4 resulted in the subject seeing red and numbing V4 eliminated red from their seeing it, we'd be forced to conclude red was quite literally in their head and not in the pen. — Hanover
Yep.Your claim is not scientific. It's linguistic — Hanover
More likely that they had not given consideration to the difference. — Banno
We know how things affect the world and so can know about a thing from its effect.
Perhaps a different analogy is more helpful. A blind man can know that he is eating an apple because he knows what apples taste like, but the taste of an apple does not “resemble” the apple or any of its properties. An apple’s taste is a phenomenological consequence of the apple’s chemicals interacting with the tongue’s sense receptors. — Michael
Ok. There's no reply to that, it's so far off track. Central to the experiment are reports of colours seen. — Banno
You can't live without it. Indirect realism inevitably opens up into global skepticism. It's an unsolved puzzle. — frank
But the argument being presented by Michale, Amadeus and perhaps yourself has the pretence of being scientific. — Banno
How can you tell it happens inside the lung and not inside the intestine? — Lionino
to the way we use the word "red", and hence to the place of red in our dealings with the world, than can be accounted for by the simplistic assertion that red is one of various purely mental or neurological phenomena. — Banno
Yep. — Banno
Some here have failed to see this. — Banno
I can't take either seriously because I don't have a vantage point from which to determine . — frank
Again, this is blatantly false. Your gears are spinning but not making the connection. — Banno
The absurdity of this should be plain. How do you tell that you are experiencing red? Well, because you know what "the colour red" is. So what is the colour red? Well, it's the experience of red. And what is the red in your experience? Why, it's the colour red, of course..."the colour red" is not anything but the experience of Red. — AmadeusD
How do you tell that you are experiencing red? — Banno
"the colour red" is not anything but the experience of Red — AmadeusD
The absurdity of this should be plain. How do you tell that you are experiencing red? Well, because you know what "the colour red" is. So what is the colour red? Well, it's the experience of red. And what is the red in your experience? Why, it's the colour red, of course... — Banno
On this view you're advocating for, you're clearly stating that there is no difference between seeing, hallucinating, and dreaming.
— creativesoul
I didn’t say that. — Michael
What's the difference between seeing red and the mental percept that 620-750nm light ordinarily causes to occur?
— creativesoul
Nothing. — Michael
And what's the difference between hallucinating red and the mental percept that 620-750nm light ordinarily causes to occur?
Or between dreaming red and the mental percept that 620-750nm light ordinarily causes to occur?
— creativesoul
Nothing. — Michael
Searle presents the example of the color red: for an object to be red, it must be capable of causing subjective experiences of red. At the same time, a person with spectrum inversion might see this object as green, and so unless there is one objectively correct way of seeing (which is largely in doubt), then the object is also green in the sense that it is capable, in certain cases, of causing a perceiver to experience a green object.
Sure - in this case. But it would be wrong to conclude that therefore the only way we use "red" is to refer to firing of certain cells in V4 - as worng as to conclude that "red" just is light at 700nm. — Banno
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