In principle I am totally on board with this. We have used technology to create the biggest and most devastating mass extinction in the history of the planet, so I'm all for using it to undo it too. — StreetlightX
Schopenhauer said the Law of Explanation (our perception that everything has to have a cause) is part of a process of pulling a united world apart. Is that what you mean? — frank
You know, "bewitchment by means of language" and all that? — Janus
But sometimes I wonder if we can ever step outside consciousness so as to explain it. — frank
if I understood it right, is that the 'what is it like' phrasing is based on the intuition that a comparison should be, or could be. possible. — Janus
If zombie-consciousness is devoid of phenomenality, what possible set of conditions could give rise to the zombie asserting phenomenality? Isn't this a petitio principii? — Pantagruel
I'm wondering how P-zombies could have a history that involves the development of words that refer to conscious experiences they don't have. — RogueAI
If I visit the doctor and inform him that I'm a chain smoker, he'll say "you should stop smoking (or else you'll regret it)" but how is "you should stop smoking" true? — TheMadFool
Well you're demanding a physical description right? How does it go when you avail yourself of the non-physical? Should be easy as pie now, shouldn't it? — Srap Tasmaner
Is a purely physical description of a photon complete? — InPitzotl
Does anyone think they can describe "what it's like to see a red patch" or "what it's like to be in pain" in non-physical terms? — Srap Tasmaner
To me the issue is not about the denial of sensation but rather about its status. We seem to understand sensation (the 'what it's like to see red') as radically private. At the same time we thoughtlessly assume that of course we all have access to the 'same' redness. — hanaH
he unspoken logic seems to be that the same-enough hardware should provide the same-enough radically-private-experience-stuff. But whence this 'should'? Anything that's radically private by definition is seemingly outside the purview of logic and science, by definition. — hanaH
How so? — T Clark
I'm sure there are. How could we have any idea about what an organism is experiencing if we don't even know the experience exists? — T Clark
A description of a rock doesn't include a rock either. What has that to do with what the rock's made of? — Isaac
Why not? — Isaac
Why? It doesn't seem to follow at all. Why would it be the case that if everything is physical we can describe it? What is it about being physical which makes something describable? — Isaac
If you mean if a bat could talk sonar that we could pick up on our equipment in an actual language expressing concepts, perceptions, and feelings, I don't see why not. — T Clark
Some philosophers would say that if she studied and observed enough to be able to use terms of color and seeing appropriately then she would know what it means to see and to see color. Is that pragmatism? It makes sense to me. — T Clark
Alien scientists certainly know about electromagnetic radiation. I doubt there would be any controversy about animals being able to sense different frequencies. Some animals can echolocate or sense magnetic or electric fields and we don't think that's hard to believe. — T Clark
It's not that physicalism cannot account for experience, it's that you define experience in a way that physicalism cannot possibly account for. In other words, if someone tells you "the experience of anger is the physical process of anger" (as I am doing) you wouldn't be convinced because by definition, to you, the experience of anger is non-physical. But that identity does allow physicalism to account for experience. — khaled
One interpretation is that the experience is fundamentally different. Another is that the experience is the physical process. And many more. The neuroscience doesn't take a side here. It just tells you what's happening in your brain at the same time as the experience. — khaled
There are plenty of physical things that don't weigh anything. Like an electric field. — khaled
Are we agreed? — Varde
Saying that there is an "experience" that is created by the neuronal activity, separate from said activity, is something you added, not something I said. — khaled
When you propose the existence of a non physical experience created by physical processes, you're not challenging physicalism, you're assuming it is false from the get-go. — khaled