3. Having an experience = having physical property P
Next he asks, "How could phenomenal consciousness just be a certain physical property? Surely if something SEEMS phenomenally conscious, it IS phenomenally conscious. "
His answer: we are not aware OF phenomenal consciousness at all. What we are aware of are the qualities (like redness) of which phenomenally conscious states make us aware. — Relativist
Consciousness is not the problem. Our account of it is. — creativesoul
All concepts are creature dependent. — creativesoul
I showed how qualia fit into a physicalist account (I did not originate this; I'm relating Michael Tye). I realize this isn't a complete account, but it's a piece of the puzzle. — Relativist
The quale "green" is not ontologically identical to the scientific concept of green (e.g. the range of wavelengths), but the two are related to one another: objects that we perceive as matching the green quale of experience are also known (through science) to reflect light in a specific range of wavelengths. — Relativist
What do you mean by "reconciled"? — Relativist
What do phenomenal concepts have in common such that that commonality makes them count as being phenomenal, whereas the non phenomenal concepts do not have/share this same common denominator or set thereof? — creativesoul
Consciousness is not the problem. Our account of it is. — creativesoul
What is the difference between those and that which does not count as being those? — creativesoul
That's not my experience (nor, I think, anyone else's). — Andrew M
The "concept" of greenness is that mental image that we perceive. The word "green" refers to this quale. The range of wavelengths associated with greenness are those wavelengths that are associated with this quale. — Relativist
The experience of greenness is nonverbal; words cannot convey the experience. — Relativist
What problems are you referring to? — Relativist
Some of the more important mental activity that is discussed in theory of mind is that which mediates between stimulus and response. — Relativist
f one morning you wake up feeling dumpy and stupid, just write an article in a philosophy forum and talk about how much you don't know about consciousness, you will feel better. The more you write about this thing that you don't know, the smarter you'll feel. — god must be atheist
Is this a real problem though? — Benkei
I'm from the "common sense" approach that what's conscious is what people decide it is and it's neither here nor there why. — Benkei
Second time I read the term "superhuman". The fact something is done at a superhuman level is now posited as an argument against something being conscious. — Benkei
I also don't think being able to reproduce the full range of human emotion should be a prerequisite to be considered conscious. — Benkei
Solipsism or not, if we suppose that you are talking-in-a-dream to other people in a language that is understood by your dream participants, then it is not a private language. — Luke
As for BIVs, do you know any? — Luke
Wording is important here, I didnt say “equal”. — DingoJones
In a certain sense I would say so ya. Obviously, when making references informally “identical” is perfectly coherent though. — DingoJones
Im not sure what 2 identical to 2 would mean. In the strict, technical way we are talking about here nothing can truly identical to anything else. — DingoJones
It would be because you're not a nominalist, and you maybe buy real abstracts/abstract objects, you'd probably be a platonist re ontology of mathematics, and so on. — Terrapin Station
Yes, it would have to be at the same time in order to be identical. If the time was different, that would not be identical. To be identical there can be no differences. — DingoJones
There's no connection between nominalism and whether objects can be composites. Under nominalism, it's just that the parts and the object are particulars (that aren't identical through time on a nominalistic rejection of genidentity as well). — Terrapin Station
t's not that "you're not allowed to conceive of it." Your abstraction isn't literally the case objectively, and your abstraction/conception itself isn't identical through time. — Terrapin Station
Not at the same time is numerical distinction, so it's not identical in that sense. — Terrapin Station
Yes, it would have to be at the same time in order to be identical. If the time was different, that would not be identical. To be identical there can be no differences. — DingoJones
That seems really incoherent. — Terrapin Station
The photon wouldn't be numerically distinct (including numerically distinct temporal instances) but we'd somehow be able to point the the photon bouncing off of numerically distinct tomatoes? — Terrapin Station
I'm asking you about the light. You used that as a determiner. — Terrapin Station
So the same light reflects off of two numerically distinct tomatoes? — Terrapin Station
Are they numerically distinct instances of redness? — Terrapin Station
Things can have identical properties, such as color, under nominalism, just not the same instances of that color? — DingoJones
A nominalist isn't going to take any numerically distinct things as identical to each other, a fortiori because we believe that the idea of this is incoherent . — Terrapin Station
So, what would make one a nominalist, at least in the more common sense of the term, is that one doesn't believe that any numerically distinct things can be identical. — Terrapin Station