What - exactly - do each of us classify as a "red cup" if not red cups? — creativesoul
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
I do not. — creativesoul
the experience of red cups always includes red cups — khaled
I'm puzzled as to why some seem to be so attached to a term, which is unclear, ambiguous and unnecessary, not to mention potentially confusing. — Janus
'I experienced the taste of the apple' or 'I perceived the taste of the apple' (even there it would be better to simply say 'I tasted the apple') but how would you use 'qualia' in that sentence? — Janus
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
I do not. — creativesoul
Sure, someone who has never seen a red cup before is going to be surprised by first doing so — creativesoul
Me too! I imagine there must be some emotional attachment to the term because it is thought to support some form of idealism. — Janus
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
I do not. — creativesoul
I do not know what you’re experiencing when seeing a red cup — khaled
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
— Luke
I do not. — creativesoul
Illusions and hallucinations of seeing red cups are not conscious experience of seeing red cups. — creativesoul
How do you know that what I experience (colour-wise) when I see a red cup is the same as what you experience (colour-wise) when you see a red cup?
— Luke
I do not. Nor need I. — creativesoul
Which aspects of conscious experience of seeing red cups are we picking out and emphasizing - to the exclusion of all else - when we say "qualia"? — creativesoul
Experience, at least insofar as we are aware of it, just is subjective, phenomenal, qualitative and felt — Janus
What would it mean to say that aspects of experience are illusory — Janus
Similarly, one could say that in vision, colors code for wavelengths. Tastes in the mouth code for certain chemicals in the food, etc. Qualia are symbolic in nature. — Olivier5
Bacteria swim towards chemical attractants. They need to move towards the higher concentration of an attractant, which means keeping track over time whether the concentration is higher where they are now than where they were some time ago. This is how it works: — Daemon
Here you've broached a subject on which I am woefully ignorant. I find panpsychism to be deeply interesting, but I can't comment on it, since I haven't read the strongest arguments for it. — Alvin Capello
Let's — Daemon
Olivier says that colours are symbols. How do colours point at certain parts of the experience? — Daemon
It seems to me that there isn't anything left for symbols to do. — Daemon
light of a certain wavelength reaches the eye, initiating a series of electrochemical impulses which eventually result in the experience of seeing a colour. — Daemon
The process can be described exhaustively in terms of electromagnetic radiation, electrochemical impulses and the like. — Daemon
without conscious experience — Daemon
Notice that the explanation bit makes no use of qualia, only of pain. — Banno
“the experience that occurs when you stub your toe” — Banno
That's not even remotely close to anything I've written here. It's closer to the exact opposite. — creativesoul
Sure, someone who has never seen a red cup before is going to be surprised by first doing so — creativesoul
I do not see why not...
There are names and descriptions for and/or of unobservables. — creativesoul
I would agree, but when it comes to people who are supposed to be describing their own conscious experience of red cups, saying that that conscious experience is ineffable is considered a flaw, not a defining feature like it is with language less conscious experience of red cups. — creativesoul
You do not know what another's conscious experience of red cups is. — creativesoul
With such an admission comes the sudden realization that one has just conceded the argument, because you do know that another's conscious experience of red cups consists - in part at least -of red cups. — creativesoul
We know that all conscious experience of red cups includes red cups — creativesoul
Ineffable" denotes that which is unable to be said; that which cannot be spoken. When pretheoretical conscious experience is ineffable, it is unable to be spoken and/or otherwise expressed by the creature having the conscious experience. This makes perfect sense. Some creatures cannot talk about past experience; all the language less ones — creativesoul
Indeed; hence, "one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is". — Banno
It only follows that we do sometimes know what others are experiencing — creativesoul
say the color of the cup, is private, ineffable, and intrinsic if the experience itself consists of, or is existentially dependent upon - in any way - external things like red cups. — creativesoul
The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something; for the box might even be empty. --No, one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is. (p.100)
But then again, no one is talking about the thing in the box (Qualia), no one is trying to “eff” Qualia. What everyone here advocating for Qualia is trying to do is say that there is something in the box, labeled “Qualia”The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something; for the box might even be empty. --No, one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is. (p.100)
Personally I would rather obliterate any and all philosophical notions that lead to widespread confusion and false belie — creativesoul
To perceive things is not at all the same as to imagine things. They are different kinds of activities. — Andrew M
From Lexico, experience is "practical contact with and observation of facts or events." Note that there is nothing there about intermediary layers, phenomenalism, or minds. — Andrew M
People's experiences sometimes differ in certain situations (reflecting differences either in the environment or in their physical characteristics). And that's a valid question to investigate. But in many situations we can predict what other people's experience will be like. I assume you and other readers would agree that the dress color looks blue and black in the image I posted. We learn which situations are like that and which aren't. — Andrew M
I see no point in going over it again. Cutting it short, "red" refers to red things, not red experiences or qualia or anything else. The referent of "red" is the extension of "red". — Banno
Adding "qualia" into the explanation achieves nothing. — Banno
Did you read The Mark of Zombie? — Banno
Answer your own question; what is added to the understanding of pain by introducing qualia? — Banno
Again, think back to the speech altering device + light altering glasses example, now imagine we removed the speech altering device and now I’m just straight up lying and saying the inverse color each time. Am I still seeing a red apple? — khaled
Well, in the one case, the person is in pain; whereas, and in contradistinction, in the other, they are not. — Banno
Again, think back to the speech altering device + light altering glasses example, now imagine we removed the speech altering device and now I’m just straight up lying and saying the inverse color each time. Am I still seeing a red apple? — khaled
Sure, there is a difference between being in pain and pretending to be in pain. No one has denied that. — Banno
It seems the dress retailers are not familiar with the Cartesian "facts". — Andrew M
That would be true if there were an intermediary (phenomenal) layer between the person and the world that they are perceiving. That intermediary layer is what I'm rejecting.
Now a color-blind person's experience... — Andrew M
or language users who've yet to have the mastery required to talk about conscious experience as a subject matter in it's own right. — creativesoul
people claim they have been wronged, political systems intend to punish behavior, and people claim that these political systems are amoral — The New Publius
a Moral Law must exist — The New Publius
which means that if they can't, they won't know what it's like — Marchesk
Well, no, as your example showed -
the imposter is discovered by examining the structure of their eye. Which has nothing to do with qualia. — Banno
but there is no way to distinguish someone who stubbornly refuses to use the right words for the right colours from someone who is actually colorblind. — Banno