What is a sense of materialness? Do explain — Bartricks
the representative data the spider has direct access to is not identical to hidden states, as you've been claiming. — Tate
Then you still have to explain what you mean by one person seeing something as red and another person seeing that same thing as blue. Does each person have different hidden states? — Michael
The representation and the prey are distinct. This is basic biology. — Tate
We have a sensation of presentness. Do keep up. — Bartricks
those signals are representative. Are you denying that? — Tate
What's the difference between saying "x causes us to see green" and saying "x causes us to respond in the way described as 'seeing green'" — Michael
The electrical signals it receives from the optic nerve are a representation. — Tate
If the same hidden state causes you to see the colour on the left and me to see the colour on the right then we are seeing different colours. — Michael
The lenses, the photo-receptors, the optic nerves delivering electrical signals. — Tate
If both "red" and "blue" refer to hidden state X then red and blue are the same colour — Michael
The schematic of the nervous system gives us ample reason to believe that a spider's brain is receiving a representation of its environment. — Tate
Hidden state X causes me to see red and you to see blue. What does "red" and "blue" refer to? — Michael
It doesn't refer to hidden state X, otherwise we would both be seeing red or both be seeing blue (or both be seeing some other colour). — Michael
We just don't know how the brain creates a holistic experience out of that. — Tate
I can see the difference between red and blue. It's immediately apparent. Therefore red and blue aren't hidden states. — Michael
we're shown a bunch of things that share the same colour-appearance — Michael
if colour is a hidden state then how can we learn to use colour words? — Michael
we have a memory and can remember how things appeared in the past and how they appear now — Michael
So when I see a white and gold dress and you see a black and blue dress we're seeing different hidden states? — Michael
When I see the dress as white and gold and you see the dress as black and blue, what do the words "white", "gold", "black", and "blue" refer to? — Michael
They don't refer to some hidden state. — Michael
the words "black" and "blue" refer to features present in your experience that aren't present in my experience. — Michael
Some object is red1 if it causes most humans to see red2 — Michael
We see them as teacups, because our culture drinks tea. — Wayfarer
The results are somewhat constrained, but not completely. And that is why the question of the interpretation of physics is still very much an unsolved issue. — Wayfarer
By the 'constituents of rational thought' I'm referring to such things as the rules of logic and arithmetic, and so on. Not just any random thought that pops into your head. — Wayfarer
The "green" in "seeing green" doesn't mean the same thing as your suggested "green" as a property of a hidden state. The former is what most people understand colour to be. — Michael
When I say "the colour that I see isn't the colour that you see" — Michael
If colour was the property of a hidden state then how do you make sense of two people seeing different colours when looking at the same thing? — Michael
This is the problem when you try to use the same labels that we use to refer to features of experience to also refer to the external world causes of those experiences. It leads us susceptible to equivocation. — Michael
there's a very big difference between saying that the cup that I see (in the context of "seeing a cup") is some external world thing and saying that some external world things cause most humans to see a cup. — Michael
But in my community it means ice cream. So the murderer's death was his just ice cream? That makes no sense at all. — Bartricks
In my community desert means ice cream. — Bartricks
how do we know anything? — Bartricks
and language. What does 'desert' mean anyway? — Bartricks
Whether that external sensible world is independent of all minds is not something one can see. How would you 'see' that? — Bartricks
I would further argue that they don't deserve anything -- beyond what human beings think they deserve (or don't deserve). And the answer to that question (What do human beings deserve?) is so personal that to try to find a general, abstract principle about it -- that is, one that applies in all or even most situations -- is a fool's errand. — Xtrix
The interesting question for me is why they have that belief to begin with. Why is the expectation an unobtainable one? It's like asking for a square with three sides. If living a pain-free existence is the only just existence, then sure: existence is unjust. But that's a rigged game, so to speak -- rigged to draw the same conclusion over and over again. Why? Because life includes pain -- it's part of the phenomenon of being alive. — Xtrix
Patterns emerge and are reinforced or altered in actual
contexts of interaction, rather than in rules or properties that supposedly exist before or outside of actual contexts — Joshs
Do you remember the dress that some people see as black and blue and others as white and gold? Same stimulus, different colours experienced.
Your account of colour would make this, and things like Locke's inverted spectrum hypothesis, incomprehensible. — Michael
Doesn't physicalism/materialism say that objects possess inherent reality, that they're real irrespective of your or my observation? And isn't that assertion central to the gist of the whole debate? — Wayfarer
The atoms of a teacup do not collude together to form a teacup
Einstein was compelled to say this by what was happening in physics during the 1920's, which threw his kind of scientific realism into doubt. That was essentially the background of the Einstein-Bohr debates which occupied many later decades (see Manjit Kumar 'Quantum: Einstein, Bohr and the Great Debate about the Nature of Reality'. Within that milieu, Heisenberg functions as a kind of modern representative of Platonism.) — Wayfarer
they're not material in nature, nor derived from or supervening on the physical. but they're real as the constituents of rational thought. It is not quite the same as conceptualism, which holds that all such things are in individual minds, because I believe that they are the properties of any and all minds. — Wayfarer
There are no intrinsic properties because the heterogeneity the world produces is not based on static facts of the matter but continually changing patterns of relationship. — Joshs
Seems like you’re falling victim to the exact equivocation I warned against. — Michael
if you want to say that something is red if it causes most humans to see red then we have two different meanings for "red" (red as the colour in the experience and red as reflecting light at a certain wavelength) leaving us susceptible to equivocation. — Michael
I would argue with Putnam , who is a semantic relativist , that the world has no intrinsic properties — Joshs
if that were the case then when you say that there is an external world red cup you're just saying that there's some external world stuff that causes most humans to see a red cup. — Michael
I don't start with a worldview. I do philosophy. I follow reason. — Bartricks
The colour that I see and the colour that the bird sees aren't part of the external world — Michael
You seem to have "bracketed", as they say, the issue of whether a classification, or a classificatory scheme, is "correct", in any sense. — Srap Tasmaner
You also imply that a classification is, shall we say, "external", "imposed" on the set: — Srap Tasmaner
The librarian has discovered that the book contains instructions for cooking; the predicate "... is a cookbook" is true of it, while many other predicates are not. It doesn't completely determine your final decision on how to classify the book (because there are many predicates you can use to partition your set, and many combinations of them), but it's now available. — Srap Tasmaner
Which is not to say that there aren't psychological explanations for my spider-watching available. Of course there are. But they don't count as reasons for me. (We are still very close to the prompting thread after all.) — Srap Tasmaner
curiosity is a clue, a retroactive experience of recognizing that you have already not understood something. It is a valorization of that failure as the proper starting point. — Srap Tasmaner
when one set interacts with a certain kind of light the "human vision" experience above is elicited, and when the other set interacts with that same kind of light the "bird vision" experience above is elicited. — Michael
Wave-particles holding wave-particles? That's a category error — Michael
The external world is just a mass of wave-particles all interacting with each other. This then causes us to see a red cup filled with water. — Michael
I think that it would be like saying that there's a person on the TV, when really it's just a bunch of pixels on the screen being lit up a certain way. — Michael
I would say that our current understanding of physics, e.g. the Standard Model, would show that it is a mistake to reduce the objects of perception to the external world causes of experience. — Michael
My view is close to idealism but I don't understand that to mean that objects don't exist, but that they are lacking inherent or intrinsic reality. — Wayfarer
To deserve something does not mean others are obliged to give it to you, as I have explained numerous times. — Bartricks
To deserve something does not mean others are obliged to give it to you — Bartricks
