I've noticed this too. What do you make of that? — csalisbury
It's queer how out of touch with truth women are. They live in a world of their own, and there has never been anything like it, and never can be. It's too beautiful altogether, and if they were to set it up it would go to pieces before the first sunset. Some confounded fact we men have been living contentedly with ever since the day of creation would start up and knock the whole thing over.
My reproach to the antinatalists and pessimists isn't that they're wrong, necessarily, but that denying 'the river' can only be a pose, even if sincerely meant. The river doesn't care etc. People will always have babies. It really fucking sucks to drown, but making sure to disapprove of the river while drowning isn't worth much. — csalisbury
They are not examples of not seeing something as something. You see an afterimage as an afterimage. a light flashed at you as a light flashed at you, scintillating scotoma as scintillating scotoma and so on. Otherwise how would you be able to identify and differentiate those experiences as such? — John
Remember, seeing something indefinite counts as seeing something as something as much as seeing something definite does. Both experiences are always already conceptually articulated. — John
than it is of seeing a blue sky. I would say the notion of seeing "immediate sensations of quality" is secondary to and derivative of seeing anything as something. — John
I don't get how causality, time, and space are not manifest in world of appearance? It seems real in the sense that it is part of the world of appearances. — schopenhauer1
As for your second statement that time isn't real in the Kantian framework, yes I just said that when I said time doesn't exist in any absolute sense for Schopenhauer and that this follows Kantian's transcendental framework. So you seemed to restate what I said as if I did not agree with you. — schopenhauer1
Will needs time/space/causality in order for the world to be Will and Representation. Otherwise, the world is just real. You have a couple problems if you say the world is just Will and representation is not "real". Here are some problems: — schopenhauer1
2) If Will is primary and representation is an illusion or somehow subordinate or secondary, then you have to explain how it is that representation is created by Will. — schopenhauer1
So, in order to counteract this idea, we have to say that representation is not secondary, but is rather the flip side of Will that ensures that there is always an object for the subject. It was there all along. — schopenhauer1
The odd conclusion is that the first organism has to always be around as it can never be caused. — schopenhauer1
I actually don't think he is saying that time existed in any absolute sense before consciousness. — schopenhauer1
Time/space/causality is simply the flip side of will. Time/space/causality only adheres in organisms. Organisms cannot exist before point 0. Since time/space/causality is the flip side of will, since organisms need to exist for there to be time/space/causality, then organisms had to exist in some ever present state for there to be time/space/causality. — schopenhauer1
This to me, just seems intuitively not convincing. It does seem that there was a time/space causality before the first organism. — schopenhauer1
There's a difference between the intentionality of experience (the blue sky) and the substance of experience (the qualia, allegedly). — Michael
The notion 'qualia' is itself not a naturally occurring, ordinary everyday idea, but an artificially produced, extraordinary philosophical idea, probably incomprehensible to, and certainly not spontaneously entertained by, most people. — John
The very fact that it is widely rejected by philosophers shows that it is far from being a necessary idea. — John
I don't think so. Consciousness is ordinarily understood to be consciousness of oneself, other people, animals, things, thoughts, bodily feelings, emotions, memories, not qualia. — John
but it intrigues me as to why TGW thinks that consciousness must be defined in terms of qualia. — John
So of course if you define p-zombies in such a way that it means they lack any and all qualia — darthbarracuda
Just take them at their word. — Michael
P-zombies lack consciousness. Only if consciousness is to be understood as qualia would a lack of qualia mean a lack of consciousness. But some, e.g. Dennett, claim that this isn't the case. — Michael
But some philosophers claim that if something is physiologically and behaviourally identical to conscious people then ipso facto it is conscious. — Michael
they're claiming that the notion of p-zombies doesn't make sense. — Michael
So Dennett isn't plugging his ears and claiming the elephant in the room doesn't exist. He's just claiming that the elephant (simpliciter) isn't an elephant but something else. — darthbarracuda
Should we automatically think that those who believe qualia is non-real are p-zombies? Shouldn't we give them the benefit of the doubt? — darthbarracuda
A philosophical zombie wouldn't even be able to comprehend the very concept of qualia. — darthbarracuda
Should we think that those who believe in god are somehow structurally different than those who do not? — darthbarracuda
(+ are you not making the same appeal to individual eccentricity by positing the existence of p-zombie types?) — csalisbury
Dennett don't think they lack something while others have it - they think that qualitative experience as a whole is a myth. — darthbarracuda
Which philosophers claim to be p-zombies? — csalisbury
I would like to know which philosophers claim they are p-zombies. — darthbarracuda
1) If subject needs object, how would that occur prior to the first organisms who create representations to know itself? How would the force of gravity allow Will to know itself? — schopenhauer1
2) If organisms can change, this contradicts the Schopenhauer's platonic forms. Evolution does not happen on grand scales as much as microchanges that might become catalyzed by large catastrophes. Anyways, it seems that the phenomena of mutations in DNA and natural selection, does not lend itself to the idea of stable Platonic gradations or Ideas that Schopenhauer thought existed and accounted for objects being the way they are when influenced by the PSR and space/time/causality. — schopenhauer1