Unfortunately we’re looking for something more formal to explain this relationship. Can we translate what you say here into symbolic logic? — Michael
he definition I provided above is Lewis’ counterfactual theory of causation. — Michael
There is no gap between how the world appears to us and how it “really” is for realists to overcome, — Joshs
How is this any different to saying “if A happens then B happens”? — Michael
Quantum mechanics is incompatible with relativity and so assuming a quantum theory of gravity can be found then he need not worry about relativity. — Michael
f he says that we carve this variance into objects then it seems that he’s being an anti-realist about these objects, even if he’s not being an anti-realist about the “fabric with features”. — Michael
What does it mean for A to cause B? — Michael
How does any of that show that colour actually is presented to experience? — Isaac
The kind of realism that can be called into question by quantum mechanics is that of counterfactual definiteness, which asserts that there are objects and that they have properties even before they are measured. — Michael
'd formed the opinion that many worlds interpretation is favoured on Youtube videos but not by actual physicist. — Banno
People seem to have qualia. The authors identified the models associated with them seeming to have qualia, but they do not actually have qualia. — Isaac
Finally, associating consciousness with inference gets to the heart of the hard problem, in the sense that inferring that something is red is distinct from receiving selective visual sensations (visual data) with the appropriate wavelength composition. Furthermore, you can only see your own red that is an integral part of your virtual reality model. You cannot see someone else’s red or another red because they are entailed by another model or hypothesis. In short, you cannot see my red — you can only infer that I can see red. In one sense, tying consciousness to active inference tells one immediately that consciousness is quintessentially private. Indeed, it is so private that other people are just hypotheses in your virtual reality model.
So what do you think - is there something hidden in plain sight, so to speak? — Banno
It is only that we can ask the question as to what that which appears to us is in itself that leads to the notion that there is anything hidden. — Janus
You relate your recent memories using a narrative of 'experiencing' seeing colours and hearing sounds. — Isaac
It means to classify the same things differently.
To see different things is to carve it all differently. — bongo fury
Well, they'd have to be either qualia or some brain activity which no one, despite decades of research, has ever seen... Hence, qualia. — Isaac
So, as far as current knowledge of cognition goes, we do not 'see' a black and blue dress internally. — Isaac
Where is this visual percept with properties such as colour and shape. Whereabouts in the brain is it stored? — Isaac
Shall we go through https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Quining-Qualia-Dennett/b00cba53a3744402b5c52accea35bff6074a38a9 again? — Isaac
If I am attempting to understand an ecosystem are the features of this system that I fail to model well ‘private’?
What makes something private? If we believe that brains make use of stored representations it would seem that we could call such entities private. They are protected from direct expose to an outside world as well as from other representations. But embodied enactivist accounts of cognition see the brain as part of an ecosystem which includes the body and the world. And even when world seems to be minimally involved in cognitive
activity ( deep thought) , we are still dealing with a total system that is in the business of making changes in itself.
That means that even my own thinking isn’t strictly ‘private’ , given that my mind is subtly reinventing itself and its past every moment of its functioning. It is already out in the world every moment , coming back to itself
from an outside. — Joshs
and as a result we directly perceive ( without simulation) a version of the other’s intentions , which subsequent experience with the other may validate or invalidate. — Joshs
The question is whether we should
look at such experiences as imagination
and dreaming as merely a re-arrangement of what was already there, the accessing of inert memories in place of contact with fresh, external novelty. Why not look at such experiences as forms of self-transformation? To do this would be to re-think the meaning of internal vs external. — Joshs
“In most intersubjective situations, that is, in situations of social interaction, we have a direct perceptual understanding of another person's intentions because their intentions are explicitly expressed in their embodied actions and their expressive behaviors. This understanding does not require us to postulate or infer a belief or a desire hidden away in the other person's mind — Joshs
That is, they dispense with the internal-external, subjective-objective divide and argue that awareness is embodied , which means that it is an interaction , either with other persons or other aspects of one’s environment, which can include one’s bodily( affective) environment. — Joshs
No, as I said in the OP, appearances enjoy default justification. That is, if something appears to be the case, then that is default evidence that it 'is' the case. — Bartricks
One follows the evidence. That is, one follows the appearances. — Bartricks
If the universe had intention to create humans it sure took a long time. — Jackson
That possibility is moot as even in a world where p-zombies are ~◇, we would be mere stones, not even p-zombies, relative to divine consciousness. — Agent Smith
Again the confusion between thought as the manipulation of information and awareness as presence in the world. — unenlightened
If p-zombies exist, physicalism would be false. Quite a riddle, this! — Agent Smith
That said, speaking for myself, I would fall in love with a p-zombie despite the fact that in movies you shoot zombies in the head, even children shoot zombies without anyone batting an eyelid! — Agent Smith
But I never experience red - I see red flowers and postboxes and swatches on paint charts. — unenlightened
It seems odd to say I am having or not having an experience. — unenlightened
I can't make sense of quaila either. Never knowingly had one. Am I a zombie? — unenlightened
Because if an event occurs at time t1, then it is present at t1, not t2. — Bartricks
That basic awareness should be absent while memory and identification is fully functional simply makes no sense to me. — unenlightened
My view is that the present moment is when our sensations tell us it is.
So, if I sense that p is present, that is default evidence that p is present.
But if won't be present if materialism is true. It'll be past. — Bartricks
So you seriously think you should start with a worldview and then proceed to reject views that conflict with it? — Bartricks
But the failure here, for Hoffman anyhow, is due to my assuming that a "real threat to fitness/real selection pressure" = physicalism and all it entails, or that it at least entails all the entities of biology existing as they are currently put forth in the mainstream view. — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, there is no logical reason that you can't have a selection pressure that is constructed by the mind as a "snake," and still have no snake. Sort of how the altimeter of a plane isn't its actual altitude and its hitting zero isn't the selection pressure of the plane crashing itself. The altimeter might be the only information a pilot has access to at night. The argument is that weare flying at night and mistake the altimeter for the ground itself. — Count Timothy von Icarus
One should simply follow reason.
In practice what this means is that worldviews should turn up in the conclusions of arguments, not the premises. The premises should be self evident truths of reason (or apparent ones). — Bartricks
The central lesson of quantum physics is clear: There are no public objects sitting out there in some preexisting space. As the physicist John Wheeler put it, “Useful as it is under ordinary circumstances to say that the world exists ‘out there’ independent of us, that view can no longer be upheld.”
Hoffman: Snakes and trains, like the particles of physics, have no objective, observer-independent features. The snake I see is a description created by my sensory system to inform me of the fitness consequences of my actions. Evolution shapes acceptable solutions, not optimal ones. A snake is an acceptable solution to the problem of telling me how to act in a situation. My snakes and trains are my mental representations; your snakes and trains are your mental representations. — Wayfarer