There are concepts, but the concepts are not about themselves. — Terrapin Station
I'm not saying anything about where it begins or ends or whether it's separated from anything else. Again, I'm not talking about the concept as such. — Terrapin Station
There's a coin, and it has a location, right? — Terrapin Station
Take a coin for example. There's a frame of reference that is the coin itself, and there's a frame of reference that's not the coin itself, but that's relative to the the coin from some other position, right? — Terrapin Station
I just answered this: the perspective of being those states. — Terrapin Station
What? I'm not saying anything about language. What the answer to a question would be is irrelevant. — Terrapin Station
Properties are how something happens to be, characteristics it has, even if that amounts to being indefinite. — Terrapin Station
Not from tye perspective of being those states. — Terrapin Station
In terms of our experience, it's a particular dynamic state of synapses, neurons, etc. — Terrapin Station
How can there be an "our" if there's no "we"? — Terrapin Station
Yeah, that's a property. In fact, even a homogeneous soup that's indeterminate would be properties. Since properties are simply ways that things are. — Terrapin Station
James Hetfield periodically sings "I am the table." — Terrapin Station
I'd definitely make a wager on that. — Terrapin Station
By the way: — Terrapin Station
There's no "we," but there's an "our"? — Terrapin Station
So the "lumpiness" is a way it is, no? — Terrapin Station
But at least we're here, right? How? — Terrapin Station
According to you it's a completely uniform sea of property-free stuff. How would it "interact," especially without having/exhibiting any properties? — Terrapin Station
Our bodies are us. That's our boundary, fuzzy though it may be on the edges on a microscopic level. — Terrapin Station
We have a completely uniform sea of whatever, with no properties, and then what? How would a creature appear amidst that, much less one with consciousness? — Terrapin Station
You don't think that there's really a shape of molecules, do you? — Terrapin Station
But you're saying that they're not really a lump of water, carbon dioxide, etc. ices and then a far less dense patch of hydrogen and helium gases, etc., right? — Terrapin Station
So let's consider something like a comet orbiting the sun. We've got a chunk of rock--water, carbon dioxide, ammonia and methane ices, mixed with dust. Then we've got space where there's very sparse amounts of hydrogen and helium gas, etc. Then we've got the sun, a very dense aggregation of hydrogen and helium gases in a plasma state, etc.
How would our mental processes alter that? — Terrapin Station
It tells us something about the world that it must be 'modelled' in this way (in any way) — StreetlightX
Anyway, sorry to be obscure. We're far away from perception now, and I don't want to derail. — StreetlightX
you're yet another person here in the "horrible reading comprehension" crowd. — Terrapin Station
we are of reality, and don't stand outside of it looking it. "If no people existed, objects would be...?" is still a strange question. — StreetlightX
Why would that be the only way you can see objects being? How would you even see that? — Terrapin Station
Why? — Terrapin Station
No, no. If there are no people then there is no perception. It's a bad question ('how would one perceive it if one were not around to perceive it?'. Very silly). — StreetlightX
So you believe that if no people existed, objects would be in what--some quantum, indeterminate state? — Terrapin Station
So how could there be anything that isn't some way or other? — Terrapin Station
In order to refer to the external matter, we have to use a type term, since that's how language works. So you're again getting confused here because you're conflating concepts and what they're in response to/about/of. — Terrapin Station
So you're an idealist? — Terrapin Station
"Property" doesn't imply "universal" or "type," by the way. — Terrapin Station
I'm a nominalist, so you're going wrong somewhere. — Terrapin Station
What do you think that properties are? — Terrapin Station
As opposed to talking about the table as the table. Or from the perspective of the table, using "perspective" in the sense it's used in the visual arts. — Terrapin Station
It's referring to the properties of experience, or we could say "the things in experience," from the perspective of that experience. — Terrapin Station
(a) "The properties of the table"
are different than
(b) "The properties of the table as you experience it"
If for no other reason simply because your experience doesn't literally have a table in it.
(b) are qualia — Terrapin Station
some people deny qualia, partially because they don't want it to be the case that there's something about mentality that's inherently third-person inaccessible, because that's a problem for tackling mentality from a scientific perspective. — Terrapin Station
once you distance yourself from it, it becomes almost an antropological study of a bunch of humans who have learened to use words in a funny way. — StreetlightX
So in other words, experiencing sights and sounds and tactile sensations and so on, and not our judgments and desires and emotions and so on. — Terrapin Station
All properties that are not quantities (that are not simply numerical). — Terrapin Station
I just don't experience things like that. I've never felt like there's something which it is like to be me. How the hell am I supposed to tell? — fdrake
It's just the qualitative properties of your experiences. You must have qualitative properties to your experiences. — Terrapin Station
I don't understand Nagel's question. Is he asking what it is to be the whole bat, or just it's brain, or what? — Harry Hindu
The qualitative properties of the bat's experiences, from the bat's perspective. — Terrapin Station
It's not saying anything at all about attitudes, preferences, valuations, etc. — Terrapin Station
Don't know, but it's also not relevant to the point; it's the fact that they work at all which undermines the model of 'bottom-up' causality. — Wayfarer
Also, if you’re a subjectivist how can you claim that subjectivism is factually correct when subjectivists don’t believe in facts? This is what I mean about relativists. They say silly things like nothing is true and then claim “nothing is true” is true. — Mark Dennis
Individuals who claim there are no moral truths have the potential for a dark hidden bias. A reason why they either hope there are no moral truths or a reason why they want to convince other people of it. Now I’m not suggesting this of you but it’s one that should make you pause when listening to other moral antirealist views. — Mark Dennis
point of them, ... is to plainly suggest 'mind over matter'. The fact that they work at all is inconvenient for materialism. — Wayfarer
I'm not referring to qualia in any unusual manner. — Terrapin Station
I'm guessing that you mean Hacker's "Is There Anything It Is Like to Be a Bat"? I'll have to read through that again, but I don't recall him saying anything that amounts to "What it's like' does not make sense in terms of conscious experience" — Terrapin Station
even for the limited range of being transitively conscious of something or other, it would be quite wrong to suppose that there is always or even usually an answer to the question ‘What was it like for you to be conscious of ...?’
It is equally misconceived to suppose that one can characterize what it is to be a conscious creature by means of the formula ‘there is something which it is like to be’ that creature, something it is like for the organism.
The sentences ‘There is something which it is like to be a human being’, ‘There is something which it is like to be a bat’, and ‘There is something which it is like to be me’, as presented by the protagonists in this case, are one and all awry.
it is wrong for Nagel to suggest that ‘we know what it is like [for us] to be us’, that there is something ‘precise that it is like [for us] to be us’ and that ‘while we do not possess the vocabulary to describe it adequately, its subjective character is highly specific.’ It is mistaken of Edelman and Tononi to assert that we all ‘know what it is like to be us’, and confused to of them suppose that ‘there is “something” it is like to be us’. And it is a confusion to think, as Searle does, that for any conscious state, ‘there is something that it qualitatively feels like to be in that state’.
While it’s true everything we define to be ordered has a designer, it’s also true that all designers are intelligent terrestrial animals. There is nothing to suggest designers could be otherwise because we’ve never seen any other possible designer, in the same way we’ve never seen any other source for design. So it would be illogical to assume that the universe could be designed by anything other than intelligent terrestrial animals — aporiap
