A moral claim is not gauged by generalized criteria. Our lives have specific histories of judgments and interests and what matters, but the difference in this question is not a matter of judging its adequacy, but accepting its implications for you, for the other. — Antony Nickles
So physics and biology answer Mary's room. Brilliant. — Wheatley
What about biology? How does my brain perceive red? — Wheatley
It's not really the same thing, in short. Language does more than what perception does, and perception does more than what language does. They deserve different concepts. I don't think I want to elaborate here; I haven't bothered with the other thread yet (and once I do, I might just lurk, as I typically do way more often than comment). — InPitzotl
A reason for what? — Wheatley
Hmm.. I bet that's controversial and an oversimplification.
— Wheatley
Explain why? — TheMadFool
It might work as a metaphor, but I wouldn't go further than that. — InPitzotl
If it were that simple we wouldn't be spending so much money researching consciousness. — Wheatley
Hmm.. I bet that's controversial and an oversimplification. — Wheatley
Because it seems like describing red scientifically is different that perceiving red. The word "learning" is thrown into the conversation and I don't know why. :chin: — Wheatley
Are these two statements equivalent? — Wheatley
That's the wave length of red.
That's not the answer you get if you ask any person to point to you to something red.
If you ask a scientist, then they'll speak of wavelengths.
Red is the colour of blood, or certain apples or of fire hydrants. — Manuel
A child knows what red is. — Wheatley
Can your prove that? — Wheatley
Red happens to be quantifiable to that wavelength. But a quantity is not a quality. — Manuel
Not in the same sense that we learn math. If Mary does actually learn anything, we need to broaden our concept of learning. — Wheatley
A little more vivid, perhaps. You can discuss a punch in the nose all day long. I would argue that you learn something from being punched in the nose that cannot otherwise be learned. Do you argue against? — tim wood
You get used to it. I don't even see the code. All I see is blond, brunette, redhead. — Cypher
Fair enough. It needs expansion. But I don't have the inclination to write an essay now. — Banno
A certain aspect of reality (quantity) is discovered all over the world
— TheMadFool
I think that's not what happens. Rather, a certain way of talking about the world is found in many places. There are, after all, languages without much by way of number. Would you say that the folk who speak them have failed to notice an aspect of reality, or would you say that they have no use for a particular process, a certain way of speaking? — Banno
Eyes do not perceive, so the answer to the question is no (I'm sure you didn't literally mean that eyes perceive, but you have to be specific here enough for me to know what you did mean).
Color vision in most humans is trichromatic; to such humans, 750nm light would affect the visual system in a particular way, that contrasts quite a bit from 550nm light. The tristimulus values for each would be X=0.735, Y=0.265, Z=0 and X=0.302, Y=0.692, Z=0.008 respectively. A protanope would be dichromatic; the protanope's visual system might have tristimulus values for each color as X=1.000, Y=0.000 and 550nm light as X=0.992, Y=0.008.
Assuming Jack is typical, Jane has an inverted spectrum, and Joe is a protanope, Jack and Jane agree 750nm light is red and 550nm light is green; and Joe doesn't quite get what the fuss is about. — InPitzotl
So folk become puzzled as to why it should turn out that 2 is so useful for Fijians as well as for Europeans. All languages use nouns, too, but this does not lead to puzzlement. Some ways of talking are better than others. — Banno
Adopting an argument from Davidson, what would a community look like in which 2+2=3? What utterances or behaviours of theirs would convince us that they thought this? How could they be seen to bring two groups of two together and get 3? How could they behave as if that were what happened? Perhaps they pretend that the fourth item has disappeared; but what would that look like to us - a ritual? — Banno
I couldn't find that quote... — Wheatley
When a photograph isn't clear, there are two possibilities:
1. Something's wrong with your eyes. Correctable with the help of an ophthalmologist
2. The photograph itself is fuzzy/blurry. Impossible to correct. — TheMadFool
Good, but not sure of the inter alia...
What else is it? — Banno
1/10+1/100+1/1000... become the very same as 1 — Banno
My hypothesis is that it's not a name because that which has a name has a creator — MAYAEL
The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao; The name that can be named is not the eternal name. The nameless is the beginning of heaven and earth. — Laozi
The impression I have got from trying to understand (i.e., not just translate) ancient Greek is not that primitive speakers were unable to figure out vowels or nuance or complexity, but rather that language itself was incidental in conveying meaning and significance, those things being presupposed to be shared, particulars being communicated by reference to that which was shared. And these things being shared, the language itself could and did remain crude (by modern standards). — tim wood
And I can further imagine that the development of the literatures of the world led slowly and then increasingly to the showing in the language itself of what was once understood external to language, thus the words evolving from tokens that referred to actualities, knowledge of which presumed shared and effectively communicated by mere reference, to meanings transferred to language itself and thus conveyed no longer by mere reference but by the language itself. - How often do we read, in approaching ancient literature, even up through Icelandic sagas, that the audience - the ones hearing - — tim wood
1. It was assumed that the correct vowels were universally known. Ergo, there would be no confusion. — TheMadFool
Man, if you don't believe I'll just die. Just do a little more reading, and you too, will agree. lol — Sam26
It's a misinterpretation of Schrodinger's cat to think the cat is both dead and alive. You can never observe the cat in both states. And, once you do observe it, it's then in one state or the other, so no contradiction. — Sam26
What you've set out here is just one side of the disagreement about Mary's Room, but I am suggesting that not just red but everything you have learned comes from experience. Do you have a counter to that? — Daemon
Mary's deficit in the room is only that she hasn't seen red. Apart from that she is a normal experiencing human being.
A computer doesn't experience anything. All the information you and I have ever acquired has come from experience. — Daemon
The electron is not in any state until it's measured, so there is no contradiction. One could think of it as the potentiality of states, or, there is the probability that it will be in this state or that state when measured. So, it's not that it's both up and down at the same time.
This reply is only meant to address some of your concerns. It doesn't address your comments or questions about Godel. — Sam26