Which is also a false or misleading picture but for different reasons. T — Andrew M
Our practical experience in everyday life is what grounds our language and knowledge about the world (which, of course, includes language and knowledge about ourselves). — Andrew M
A necessary part of dissolving the hard problem is to identify false or misleading pictures of consciousness. One such picture is the Cartesian ghost in the machine. — Andrew M
Isn't it, specifically, the third sort of hypothetical construct we consider in the zombie discourses? — Cabbage Farmer
To me it makes more sense to say that our color concepts range over physical objects. The word "red" is a name primarily for wavelengths of a certain frequency-range with fuzzy boundaries; and is a name derivatively for physical objects that emit or reflect light of the specified range "in ordinary circumstances". — Cabbage Farmer
And that electromagnetic radiation is what we're calling color out in the world. — Terrapin Station
How does the brain go beyond processing information to become subjectively aware of information? The answer is: It doesn’t. The brain has arrived at a conclusion that is not correct. When we introspect and seem to find that ghostly thing — awareness, consciousness, the way green looks or pain feels — our cognitive machinery is accessing internal models and those models are providing information that is wrong. The machinery is computing an elaborate story about a magical-seeming property. And there is no way for the brain to determine through introspection that the story is wrong, because introspection always accesses the same incorrect information.
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/12/opinion/sunday/are-we-really-conscious.html
But the argument here is that there is no subjective impression; there is only information in a data-processing device. When we look at a red apple, the brain computes information about color. It also computes information about the self and about a (physically incoherent) property of subjective experience. The brain’s cognitive machinery accesses that interlinked information and derives several conclusions: There is a self, a me; there is a red thing nearby; there is such a thing as subjective experience; and I have an experience of that red thing. Cognition is captive to those internal models. Such a brain would inescapably conclude it has subjective experience.
~Michael S. A. Graziano
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/12/opinion/sunday/are-we-really-conscious.html
I'm still not clear whether there is a consensus view in this conversation with respect to what counts as a zombie, and what features of consciousness the zombie is said not to possess. So far I have the impression that many of us are speaking at cross-purposes, with different conceptions of p-zombie in mind. — Cabbage Farmer
If so, then it seems it's not consciousness per se that they call an illusion, but only some more subtle aspect that many of us insist belongs to consciousness, something like phenomenal character. Is that right, or am I off the mark in assessing their view? — Cabbage Farmer
that it seems as if one is having a phenomenally rich experience of (in his example) green-golden sunlight, Vivaldi violins, and so on. And if there is this seeming, then, once again, there just is phenomenology. — Galen Strawson
The experiments are less about illusion and more supposed to show the defenders of qualia are failing to meet that definition. — Forgottenticket
What is the brain structure for first person experience? — Harry Hindu
They are all eventually solved by science, — Harry Hindu
In other words, they both one and the same and should be working together, not separately. — Harry Hindu
nfortunately philosophy doesn't have a very good track record when it comes to solving difficult problems. That is the domain of science — Harry Hindu
Exactly. That's the why we should be using the term, "qualia" since we don't know that the bat has experiences of color or sound. — Harry Hindu
I really don't see how questions like this help us get at the nature of conscious experience. — Harry Hindu
Doesn't the theory of evolution by natural selection show us that are brain structures evolved from previous brain structures like the kind that that has. — Harry Hindu
But what the bat experiences something else that isnt color or sound when using sonar? — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that you are being inconsistent in your assumptions. You already assumed that the bat has first person experiences and experiences colors and sounds, but then you want to question whether the bat experience is the world similarly to humans? — Harry Hindu
Why would similar brain structuring mean it provides a first-person experience but with different qualia? — Harry Hindu
How would it be useful to have a description for sonar experiences? What purpose would the description serve? — Harry Hindu
Might one day" being the salient phrase here. — Janus
Even if consciousness were an illusion, we act in many of the ways we do, and say many of the things we do, because we think of ourselves as being conscious, and the p-zombie could not have such a self-reflexive self-understanding. — Janus
I take it by the phrase "philosophical zombie", you mean a creature exactly like a human being in every physical detail, that behaves exactly like a conscious human being, but that somehow lacks sentience, or the phenomenal character of conscious experience, or something along these lines. Is that about right? — Cabbage Farmer
Would those things that we don't experience thanks to the limitations of our sensory organs be considered subjective, too? In other words, are you saying that the information that is missing from our experience of the world is subjective and everything else is objective? — Harry Hindu
Right, computers don't have neurological structures, and that's why we have little reason to seriously consider the possibility that they might experience anything in the kind of way that we think we and other animals do. — Janus
Does Nagel believe that what it is like to be a bat exhausts everything it is to be a bat including the non- nerological parts of the body that include the stomach, intestines, blood and feces? If not, then he's really not asking what it's like to be a bat. He's asking what it's like to be a specific part of the bat, no? — Harry Hindu
He is saying that our intuitive, unexamined folk theories of "conscious experience" should not be trusted and given a privileged status, simply because they are ours. — SophistiCat
I dont see how such things can be labeled as subjective. How are your imaginings, dreams and inner dialog subjective if I can refer to them with language and use them as explanations for your behavior that I percieve? — Harry Hindu
Red and black are mental properties, or effects, that are about the ripeness of the apple, the light in the environment and the state of your visual system thanks to causation. Effects carry information about their causes. Illusions (or subjectivity) crop up when our minds don't interpret the causes correctly. — Harry Hindu
Isn't just obvious that Dennett is flogging a dead horse? — Wayfarer
All the perception stuff Dennett shows in his videos is to show people can't be sure about their qualia and if they can't be sure about that then how can they commit to it being real. — Forgottenticket
If they'd just realize that this is a mistake . . . — Terrapin Station
And it seems like people go, Dennett says consciousness is an illusion. He showed us some optical illusions. So he must be right." It makes no sense. — Terrapin Station
What is meant by "real" may be debatable, but according to any ordinary definition colour is real and not merely a mental phenomenon, since some at least of the processes which give rise to colour as a phenomenon are physical — Janus
If we're granting that we have the mental phenomenon of color (so that we can have an "illusion"), then we can't turn around and say that we don't have the mental phenomenon of color. — Terrapin Station