Consciousness has nothing to do with brains. — bert1
We don't dream that way (as far as I know) because "other people who have minds of their own" is such a basic, never-violated rule of reality. We don't observe, meet, or interact with our own imagined characters in the real world. — Bitter Crank
Is it the skepticism about mental pictures / symbols in the brain? Do you need them in your intuition of consciousness or perception? — bongo fury
An altogether terrifying prospect. This seems to imply that the real universe is different to the one that exists inside our heads. — Mark Dennis
Idealist philosophers aren't saying that anything you think is correct, just because you think it. If they were as naive as you depict them to be, then there would be nothing to discuss! — Wayfarer
The bent stick can be called an illusion, therefore, because that sensation is not coherently and regularly connected to the others. If we pull the stick out of the water, or we reach down and touch the stick, we will get a sensation of a straight stick. It is this coherent pattern of sensations that makes the stick. If we judge that the stick is bent, therefore, then we have made the wrong judgement, because we have judged incorrectly about what sensation we will have when we touch the stick or when we remove it from the water.
Lovely story but I'm not sure that it teaches us anything we didn't know already.
A child learns to speak by imitation. Echoing. Parroting. — Amity
so I'm not sure what's all that new here. — StreetlightX
ell, it's akin to asking why any physical stuff has just the properties it does. — Terrapin Station
All of this is true of our situation as we perceive it but says nothing about any purported "reality" above and beyond our perceptions. You can go around in circles about this issue forever, but you are never going to know anything which is beyond our capacity to know, and the question about how things are in themselves is the paradigmatic example of a question that we cannot even coherently formulate. let alone find an answer to. — Janus
Exactly, and sometimes it seems like that's what critics are demanding. — Terrapin Station
The man in theChinese room does understand something - the rules for returning certain scribbles when given certain scribbles. If the scribbles have another meaning then that just means you need to provide the rules for using the scribbles with the different meaning. — Harry Hindu
I agree with correlationism. The dinosaur argument undermines it? — frank
In other words, we form a picture of 'mind' here and 'object' there, and wonder what the relationship is between the two. But there are not two, there is the 'perceiving of the object.' — Wayfarer
especially because they'll give no clear criteria for what fhey require of explanations. — Terrapin Station
Descental spirit. Not ancestral. Otherwise, correct. — god must be atheist
Keeping in mind, of course, that effective, reasonably priced, and widely available contraception - a prerequisite for anti-natalism - wasn't available until about 60 years ago. — T Clark
It is too late to be antinatalist. If one were going to nip child-bearing in the bud, one would have to have been actively promoting antinatalism to the immediate descendants of Homo Erectus. The day we became Homo sapiens -- hundreds of thousands of years ago -- was the day you should have been out and about preaching antinatalism. Now with 7.2 billion people, it is just too late. It is impossible to convince 7.2 billion people of ANYTHING. — Bitter Crank
I think it's worth asking why are people who think that there's an "explanatory gap" likely to accept explanations that are "mapping between rich conscious descriptions and brain processes"? — Terrapin Station
As Kant noted, all we can reference is the phenomena, that which we perceive. We cannot even coherently discuss the noumena or the things in themselves. It makes no sense to ask what something really looks like without referencing what I subjectively see it to look like. — Hanover
To say that there are no independent things is to say there are no distinctions, then why is my mind full of distinctions? — Harry Hindu
We cannot say what the wave function "really is" any more than we can say what a tree "really is" above and beyond our experience of, and thoughts about, it. — Janus
Notice that these are physical issues, not metaphysical. — "Banno
The world is like chairs and desks and particles and space. What is it that remains a puzzle? — Banno
It's perhaps only metaphysicians that get confused into thinking we can't. — Banno
But I think you want to say something deeper... — Banno
But there is no incompatibility here. We can talk about the chair in terms of moving it around the table, and then in terms of it's chemistry. We are still talking about the chair. — Banno
The concept 'existence' applied to 'chairs', or 'molecules' or 'gods' implies nothing other than the functional utility of those concepts which varies according to context and user. — fresco