If we're talking past each other or living in different realities, then how can you say that we are disagreeing? Agreements and disagreements would be incoherent. Your view loses any distinction between delusions and any other kind of thought. And if we can only talk past each other, then what is the point of talking at all? Why should anyone care about your's or anyone else's subjective "truths"?Well, guys, I have found people who agree with me, and people who disagree with me in a way that it feels like we're living in different realities and talking past each other, so I rest my case :wink: — leo
I find that option no less plausible than believing the experiences we have in common stem from a world that exists independently of us. I am sure that I have experiences, I am confident that others have some experiences in common with me, I am less certain that these experiences stem from a world independent of us (as in a world that doesn't depend on minds).
I have evidence of mind (my own), I don't have evidence of something that doesn't depend on mind. — leo
Your own definition makes the same distinction I am making. A belief is a feeling and feelings tend to be projected onto things that have no feelings, which is how subjectivity crops up. A belief is a feeling of being certain, but that doesn't necessarily mean that it is true. You can feel certain, but that doesn't necessarily mean that what your feeling is about is true. As your definition states, it is what those feelings are about - meaning some state of affairs independent of your beliefs and feelings - that are true. Your feelings are just another state-of-affairs which I can have beliefs about, but your feelings exist in a such a way independent of any of my feelings or beliefs about them. How your feelings are are true, but what they are about is a different story entirely.What is the difference between truth and belief? Cambridge dictionary defines belief as "the feeling of being certain that something exists or is true". You're implicitly saying that there is a true way to differentiate between truth and belief. — leo
We are all stating beliefs. The real shape of the Earth, independent of our statements about it's shape, is the truth - objective. Some of our terms are meant to be approximations, like the terms we use to describe the Earth's shape. "Accuracy" is a term that I like to use when it comes to the relationship between our claims and the truth. Our claims are more or less accurate when it comes to describing how things actually are (the truth). So some of these terms may be more accurate, but not necessarily entirely accurate, than others when describing the shape of the Earth.You're saying it is true that the Earth is a sphere, but many people say it is true that the Earth is an ellipsoid, and many other people say that it is true the Earth is neither a sphere nor an ellipsoid but something that approximates these shapes, and many other people say it is true that the Earth is flat. Who is right? Who is stating a truth and who is stating a belief? — leo
Asking how truth is objective is incoherent because truth and objectivity are the same thing. If truth/objective is independent of our beliefs then it doesn't matter whether you disagree or not. It doesn't even matter if you are aware of it or not. Truth is independent of your awareness.If I disagree with you, how is your truth objective? — leo
Your beliefs are such that they exist independent of what I think or believe about them. — Harry Hindu
It is incoherent to use Solipsist in the plural sense. If solipsism is the case, then there can only be one solipsist. If solipsism is the case, then beliefs become incoherent as there would be no aboutness to beliefs. The idea of solipsism makes the concept of "mind" incoherent.Solipsists do not agree with that, so how are my beliefs objective? — leo
Then we would always be talking past each other - never talking about the same thing.If there is no objective truth, then why do so many people on this forum feel the need to quote other philosophers as if those other philosophers hold some truth about others than just the philosopher being quoted? — Harry Hindu
Because they agree with these philosophers, they share the same point of view about something, or they believe they do. This is my view, my personal truth. If you disagree with me, then you have a different truth, and we're not sharing the same truth, so it isn't objective. — leo
Searle's Chinese Room is a thought experiment that is easily debunked for many reasons, one of which is that Searle never defines "understand" to show the difference between "real" understanding and "simulated" understanding. Is there a phenomenal difference between the two? Is this relying on the untenable, and biased, position that carbon-based constructs are special in that they generate consciousness while silicon-based constructs cannot?But it seems an error to suppose that consciousness can be produced merely by winding enough of the right sort of "information processing" into an AI program. To wit, Searle's Chinese room. — Cabbage Farmer
Then the world we see is an appearance of a greater mind we all belong to, which includes the whole world. When we explore the world, we are indirectly exploring that mind. — leo
"Objective truth" is a redundancy. What is objective is the truth. It is objective that the Earth is a sphere, not flat, despite what people believed, or still believe. You are even making the objective claim that reality is such a way independent of what others think or believe - that there is no objective truth. If I were to say that there is only objective truth, am I right or wrong in disagreeing with you? What would be the point of disagreeing?The concept of objective truth seems incoherent to me. If we say objective truth is something everyone agrees on, it seems that there is nothing everyone agrees on, and not everyone agrees that "there is nothing everyone agrees on", and so on and so forth.
If we say that objective truth exists out there but we can't access it or not all of us can access it, then how is that an objective truth? If no one can access it then it's an idea, not a thing, and if only some can access it then it is personal, not objective.
However if we say "There is only personal truth", then we are not stating an objective truth, we are stating a personal truth, and that way we can remain coherent. — leo
Yes, it is like the integrated information theory of consciousness. I don't see how it could be any type of dualism as dualism in any form is contradictory and has a hard problem itself of explaining how two different types of "properties" or "substances" interact. I have no idea what "strong emergentism" is (nothing comes up in a Google search). As for identity theory, that seems to have more to do with direct realism vs indirect realism. Is the brain you experience a mental model of others' mental information processing? When you look at another person, do you experience them as they truly are - a body with a brain, or is that just a model of what they really are - information? What about when you look in a mirror and see your body, but don't see a mind? What does that mean in relation to what you are? What are you when you look in the mirror - a mind, a body, something else?This sounds like the integrated information theory of consciousness. I'm unclear as to where that is a property dualism, strong emergentism or some form of identity theory. — Marchesk
What would the difference between ii and iii be if the automaton had an outer layer that looked like flesh and therefore looked human and behaves like a human? The only real difference here would be one is electronic while the other is biological. Are you saying that biological matter gives rise to subjectivity while electronics cannot? I think that is part of the problem. I think we should be thinking of this from a perspective of information processing which can be performed by both biological and electronic machines.Maybe I should press this definitional issue:
The p-zombies about which I've heard rumors are not just
i) any AI that passes the Turing test; nor just
ii) any AI automaton that passes the Turing test and outwardly resembles a human and is normally mistaken for a human under a wide range of ordinary circmstances; but rather are
iii) biological creatures physically and behaviorally indistinguishable from human beings (which thus of course pass the Turing test), which creatures -- by definition in these discourses, if yet somehow inexplicably -- lack the thing we here agree to call "subjective experience with phenomenal character".
Isn't it, specifically, the third sort of hypothetical construct we consider in the zombie discourses? — Cabbage Farmer
I asked before, "Is it useful to perceive the apple is red?" I asserted that it wasn't. It is useful to perceive that the apple is ripe. Now the question is, is perceiving that the apple is red the same as perceiving it is ripe? Is the only way to perceive the ripeness of an apple is to see redness of the apple? If the answer is yes, then it IS useful to perceive the apple is red. One might say that redness of apples IS the perception of the ripeness of apples.The two idioms you gesture at here, which I might distinguish as ordinary language and scientific language, are both cultural products of human animals, cumulatively informed by experience of the empirical world as it appears to us.
I see no reason to suppose that p-zombies -- which are by definition in these discourses, I take it, physically and behaviorally identical to human beings -- would prefer either one of these idioms any more than we do.
You seem to take for granted that the term "red" is primarily subjective. On what grounds would you support such a claim? Concepts like the concepts of red, loud, and painful all seem to have objective associations and criteria, so far as I can tell. They're less precise than the measurements made by those equipped to measure more precisely; but isn't that precision mainly a matter of the instrument employed, not of the distinction between subject and object? I mean, for instance in the first case, the naked eye, and in the second -- what do we use for that -- a spectrometer (the output of which is available to us via the naked eye or some other sense-receptor)? — Cabbage Farmer
I agree, and is why computer-brained robots with sensory devices like cameras, microphones, and tactile pressure points where information comes together into a working memory would have "experiences", or a point-of-view.I would argue that much traditional puzzling over "secondary qualities" consists in pseudoproblems and misconceptions, and should be cleared up through a rehabilitation of our concept of perception.
What "converts" red light into an experience of red light and an experience of objects that emit or reflect red light? Cognitive systems like ours with sense receptors like ours. — Cabbage Farmer
All of that for which one can strive for apprehension therewith; the sum of every form and each instance in which all are brought to fruition, of which the world is itself constituted, is bound by the condition wherein there is present a subject through whom is yielded its sight yet neither are to subsist in a wholesome state if it be the case that either be absent whilst the other remains. — Vessuvius
And that electromagnetic radiation is what we're calling color out in the world. — Terrapin Station
As if anyone thought that a perception of a tree might be, in fact, identical to the tree. I know that Dennett has made comments in that vein a number of times as if he's saying something insightful. — Terrapin Station
I've brought Graziano's theories to the forum before - primarily his attention-schema theory of consciousness. I believe that what he is proposing is that attention is interpreted as the point of subjectivity. The existence of attention is what provides that feeling of being in your head and attending to the contents of the mind. It is really just a brain mechanism of amplifying certain sensory signals over others.Here's an outright denial that credits Dennett and P. Churchland: — Marchesk
P-zombies would use language in a way that would never refer to colors or sounds or feelings. They would use language in a way that refers to the causes of colors and sounds and feelings. They wouldn't use terms like, "red", "loud" or "painful". They would use terms like "680 nanometers" (the wavelength of EM energy that is registered as "red" in the mind), "amplitude", or "injury". In a sense they would use language as if they had a view from no where. They would never say that an apple is red. They could only say that the apple is ripe.There are some interesting consequences for this argument. An identical p-zombie universe would still have all the same stories we have. But many stories have first person points of view. So how do p-zombies understand reading or watching someone's thoughts or dreams? How do they make sense of a character undergoing intense emotion not apparent to other characters? — Marchesk
Arguably the p-zombies, as well as some sorts of advanced AI, would each have a sort of first-person point of view. I mean, we can say they make reliable introspective reports analogous to ours. For instance about states of appetite and emotion, about goals and plans and intentions, pains, sense-perceptions, memories, daydreams....
Their observations and reports about things outside them as mediated by sense-receptors will be as fine-grained and reliable as ours; and their observations and reports about things inside them as mediated by "introspective processes" will be as fine-grained and reliable as ours. I believe this comes by definition in these discourses; this is part of what it means to be a p-zombie, if there could be such a thing. — Cabbage Farmer
For several reasons, researchers have typically either postponed addressing this question [the hard question] or failed to recognize—and assert—that their research on the ‘easy problems’ can be seen as addressing and resolving aspects of the hard question, thereby indirectly dismantling the hard problem piece by piece, without need of any revolution in science.
..the widespread conviction that qualia, thus conceived, must obviously exist if we are to make sense of our introspective access to them, is an illusion, not an optical illusion or auditory illusion, but a theorist's illusion, an artefact of bad theory, not observation. Richard Power nicely captures the source of this illusion. — D Dennett
We know that our perceptions or imaginings of trees, faces, etc. are distinct from the objects themselves. They are internal representations, representations in our minds. — R Power
We understand the concept of representation from external representations, such as pictures, or verbal descriptions. For these representations we can have direct experience of both a representer (e.g. portrait painting) and a representee (e.g. the person painted). Call these the medium and the content. Thus for the Mona Lisa, the medium is a painting that hangs in the Louvre; the content is an Italian woman who modelled for the artist centuries ago. Medium and content may have attributes in common, if the representation is iconic (as they say in Semiotics). Oval partly-brown patches in the painting resemble the oval brown eyes of the Italian lady. But usually medium and content are of different stuff: oil on canvas, in the case of the Mona Lisa, as against human flesh. And in many cases the representation is symbolic, so that medium and content share no features. — R Power
So there are no "qualia", there is only "virtual glue". Forgive me if I dont see an improvement, or anything different than someone saying, "There is no God, only Allah".There are no qualia, instead there is something akin to the idea of "virtual glue" that performs the functional and informational roles that qualia is supposed to be playing. — Marchesk
Yeah. The paradox is in valuing a world without values, of preferring a world without preferences. — Banno
Think of subjective statements as value statements and objective statements as non-value statements. Subjective statements contain terms like, "good", "bad", "best", "worst", "right", "wrong", etc., while objective statements lack these terms. Subjective statements are basically a shortcut, or misuse, of language that projects one's preferences on objects - as if the noun in the statement possessed the quality that the subjective terms refer to rather than referring to the user's own preferences.Objectivity is a distinctively human trait, as only human beings have the capacity for objectivity. It involves the ability to shift perspective, and no one has ever attributed this to animals. Objectivity requires us to stand back from our perceptions, our beliefs and opinions, to reflect on them, and subject them to a particular kind of scrutiny and judgement. Above all, it requires a degree of indifference in judging that may conflict with our needs and desires — Matias
Can you give an example?Truth and objectivity are not the same thing. One can arrive at true theories in a non-objective way. — Matias
This is the problem of knowledge, not anything to do with objectivity vs. subjectivity.Conversely, objective theories are not necessarily true. The history of science provides plenty of examples of the objective formulation and defence of theories that have turned out to be false and have been replaced by other theories. Objectivity is no guarantee of truth, any more than truth can only be the outcome of objectivity. — Matias
What are we to make of this statement and all of your other statements, then? Are you making a truth claim here - that the idea that we are being guided towards the truth is wholly misleading? Are you misleading us with your statements, or are you trying to refer to some real state-of-affairs that is true from an alternate perspective - like one outside of everyone's minds (a view from nowhere) and looking at all minds objectively as if they all had the same property of being misled towards the truth?The problem with thinking of objectivity exclusively in general terms, as elimination of prejudice or bias, is that it encourages an absolutist view of objectivity. The prime example of such an absolutist conception is the view from nowhere.
There are two problems with this conception. First, the idea that we are being guided towards *the* truth is wholly misleading. — Matias
What is the difference between the "best answers" and the "truth"?What we are being guided towards are the best answers to the questions that we pose. — Matias
They are all eventually solved by science, — Harry Hindu
No. My statement is based upon the fact that science has a better track record at solving difficult problems than any other method of investigating reality.You're a time traveller? — Marchesk
You seem to think that every philosophical question ever asked is coherent enough for, or worthy of, an explanation at all.So philosophy should just be science? But philosophy asks broader questions and questions that science doesn't know how to address. Some questions like how to live are not scientific questions. — Marchesk
Then maybe the entire brain and the rest of the nervous system works together to create the first person experience - which supplies that extended feeling of being in a body with tactile sensations extending from the head where the brain is. In a sense, your mind is what it is like to be your nervous system.My guess would be those structures that handle sensory data and integrate them into a perception in addition to the ones for memory, imagination, dreams, thoughts and any kind of experience. There's likely a lot of overlap there. — Marchesk
What is the brain structure for first person experience to say that both the human and bat have it?Because we don't brain structures for sonar perception. — Marchesk
They're just questions to me. It doesn't matter whether they are philosophical or not. They are all eventually solved by science, and philosophy should keep up with science in order to stay valid. In other words, they both one and the same and should be working together, not separately.If science can solve such questions, sure. Until then, they remain philosophical. — Marchesk
What is controversial about "qualia" but not about "color"?I try to avoid qualia because it has controversial properties, and will be used by critics to dismiss the argument. — Marchesk
Well, this is a philosophy discussion, as people like to point out, so discuss how it is useful to you.That it's subjective — Marchesk
Then the purpose is to understand the nature of conscious experience. Unfortunately philosophy doesn't have a very good track record when it comes to solving difficult problems. That is the domain of science. Philosophers can keep asking questions until we are blue in the face, but we have to wait for science to catch up to the questions philosophy asks, or at least determines that they are incoherent questions.Useful? Purpose?
This is a philosophical discussion about the nature of conscious experience. It's not about whether being able to know sonar experiences would be useful. — Marchesk
Exactly. That's why we should be using the term, "qualia" since we don't know that the bat has experiences of color or sound.But what the bat experiences something else that isnt color or sound when using sonar?
— Harry Hindu
That's the point. — Marchesk
I really don't see how questions like this help us get at the nature of conscious experience.What's it feel like to have 8 tentacles with suckers? — Marchesk
Doesn't the theory of evolution by natural selection show us that are brain structures evolved from previous brain structures like the kind that the bat has?Because we don't brain structures for sonar perception. — Marchesk
Qualia is first person, but I prefer to talk in terms of color, sound, etc. — Marchesk
Then it is already implied that the bat has first person experiences so that you can then go about wondering what it is like to have sonar.Qualia is first person, but I prefer to talk in terms of color, sound, etc. — Marchesk
How would it be useful to have a description for sonar experiences? What purpose would the description serve?We don’t have a description for sonar experiences, nor do we have a way of gaining them from science. That’s Nagels point. — Marchesk
No, not unless panpsychism is true. The things we can't perceive that we learn about through science are described in objective terms. — Marchesk
Then the question Nagel is asking is more concerened about whether or not different senses produce different qualia, not whether or not there is a 1st person perspective of qualia?He's asking what the experience of using sonar is. Is it accompanied with something like color or sound? The reason for choosing a bat is because it has a sensory modality we lack. It's akin to being born blind and then learning that other people see color, whatever that means for a person blind from birth. — Marchesk
The thing is we know that we experience. — Janus
You said mental things are done by the brain. What if the atoms we were referring to make up the neurons in your brain? Isnt electricity a necessary component for the brain to do mental things?The difference is that those atoms aren't part of a material system that amounts to mental phenomena. — Terrapin Station
Yes, but what about computer robots that process information from sensory systems (detecting level of pressure on their surface when touching objects, the information in the light and vibrating air molecules, and chemicals in the air) for the purpose of navigating its environment and finding sources of energy to replenish its finite supply? It's nervous system would consist of the necessary wiring for the transmission of electrical signals between the sensory devices and the computer brain. Would this entity possess a "what it is like"?As I said in the answer above; it seems we have al least some motivation to ask the question of bats, since there is every indication that they are percipient beings, as we find ourselves to be. There is little motivation to ask the question of toasters since we have zero reason to believe they are percipient. Same goes for computers. — Janus
What makes us think that there is a what it is like for a bat, but not ask the same question of a computer robot with sensory systems?He's asking what the subjective experience of a bat is like; which obviously cannot be answered since we are not bats. But really the question is "is it like anything to be a bat?". Of course, we know what the question means, but I never liked the "what's it like" part, because being a bat cannot be like anything but being a bat, if it is like anything at all. Perhaps the question should be simpler, perhaps "is there any subjective 'feel' to being a bat?". Of course the answer is that we don't and cannot know; we can only guess. — Janus
Like I said, we don't experience atoms and we use them as explanations for what we do see. We can't see anything smaller than a wavelength of EM energy. So there are things that we don't experience in the world that aren't just imaginings and dreams. 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?Because you can't experience my imagination, dreams, inner dialog and have to settle for language and behavior to know about them. And if I don't tell you, there will be experiences I have you won't ever know about, nor will you have any means of finding out, because they can't always be inferred from behavior. — Marchesk
Not yet. But we can hook someone's brain to a computer and have it interpret their intentions and move a mouse cursor on the screen and click on letters to type words. Google "Brain-Computer interfaces".It's not like we can hook someone's brain up to a machine and have it read out their thoughts or display their dreams on a tv. — Marchesk
I don't understand Nagel's question. Is he asking what it is to be the whole bat, or just it's brain, or what?This why Nagel asked what it's like to be a bat and used that as an example of how there is a gap between objective explanation and subjective experience. — Marchesk
And both positions have their criticisms and faults precisely because they fail to acknowledge the reality of morality - that there is no such thing as an objective morality and why there are ethical dilemmas. What it ultimately boils down to is that we all find ourselves as social beings sharing a world with others that have goals that we are trying to pursue both as individuals and as groups, and that sometimes those goals come into conflict.Such an understanding of ethics is at odds with the prevailing schools of thought - deontology and consequentialism. Nussbaum's views are not original, but are worth being heard given what for many are the default positions, deontology and consequentialism, that frame moral and ethical issues. — Fooloso4
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? How is that any different than talking about atoms as an explanation for the behavior of matter that I perceive? Your imaginings, dreams and inner dialog have as much causal power as a boulder rolling down a hill towards your car an can be talked about like we can talk about any natural process.And how does this work with imagination, dreams, inner dialog? Subjective experience isn't exclusive to perception. — Marchesk
This certainly isnt anywhere near being original or mind-blowing. People who understand other peoples intentions and their own and who find intelligent ways if navigating between the two are considered moral or ethical. Ethics is about having goals and finding ways to ensure a good compromise between different or conflicting goals. Ethical dilemmas arise as a result of seeing everyone as equals and therefore having equal rights to achieving their goals. If others didnt have goals or equal rights in achieving them, we wouldnt need ethics.The capabilities approach locks us in to considering our own feelings and those of others in a way that I find appealing. If one is not taking others into account one is not acting ethically. Flourishing at the expense of others is not acting ethically. Acting ethically is maintaining human dignity, and hence a life worthy of that dignity. — Banno
So, they think that consciousness is actually physical and the illusion is that it is not? What does it mean to be physical vs non-physical? Once you go down this road you acquire not just another hard problem, but a "serious problem" with having to explain how the physical and non-physical interact. Dualism is the problem and monism is the answer. Also discarding these incoherent terms of "physical" and "non-physical" would also be useful. Everything is information which is why there is an aboutness to your mind - of being about the world. Your mind is an effect (as well as a cause hence the need for explanation about how the mind and world interact) and effects are about their causes. This is why we can get informed about the ripeness of the apple and about your visual system and about the light in the environment just by the color on the apple that you see.Dennett, like Chalmers, Searle, etc. thinks that consciousness can't be fit into a physicalist explanation of the world. But unlike them, he takes the position that this means consciousness must be an illusion, because why would consciousness be the one thing that's an exception in the universe? — Marchesk
After reading and hearing enough Dennett, I can't say that he even knows what he's talking about.I've read and heard enough of Dennett to be convinced that he thinks there is no consciousness and we are philosophical zombies. Except that he likes to keep using the word with a different definition. Which would be consciousness in the functional or behavioral sense only, because those can be fit into a materialist explanation. — Marchesk
If consciousness is an illusion, then how is free will not?I haven't been angered but I have been frustrated by some neuroscientists who say we do not have free will and in some cases this position has implications in law and morality. They argue your mind is your brain, the brain is programmed, so there's no free will. I think science needs to be more circumspect and more creative. An economist might say, dollars don't exist, it's just a collective illusion, I think this is very bad advice and I also think it is bad, greedy reductionist advice to say free will is an illusion. — D. Dennett
CJ How important is self-reflection to consciousness?
DD Very. — The Guardian.com
That isn't a problem at all. We speak objectively all the time - about the world, about our minds, about our preferences. Subjective language is just category errors where we project mental phenomenon onto non-mental phenomenon - like as if the apple were really red. The apple is ripe or rotten, not red or black. Ripeness is a property of fruit, not minds. Redness is a property of minds, not light or apples. 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.If it is a mistake, nobody has succeeded in showing how you can explain the subjective in terms of the objective, which is what the hard problem is about. See Nagel. — Marchesk
Here's a brief article about it:
https://curiosity.com/topics/theres-no-such-thing-as-consciousness-according-to-philosopher-daniel-dennett-curiosity/ — Terrapin Station
Dennet's next metaphor: If our brain is a smartphone, then consciousness is the screen. In other words, consciousness is not how our brain works, it's only how we interface with it. — curiosity.com
A sleight of hand is a kind of distraction, not really an illusion. The magician distracts your attention while they do something else where you arent looking. Why and how would the brain distract itself just so it could do something else?Dennett and Frankish use the metaphor of a magic show with slight of hand being used to fool our brains. — Marchesk
What does it mean for our brain to fool "us"? Are we not our brain along with the rest of our body? Why would the brain want to fool itself? It seems like an awful lot of energy put into the brain just fooling itself.Consciousness is compared to a magic show, where the brain fools us using some slight of cognition we're not aware of. — Marchesk
It seems to me that the hard problem is the result of dualism - not the other way around.The goal is to dissolve the hard problem without just handwaving it away or giving into some form of dualism. — Marchesk
The sensation of shape and weight are not the shape and weight of the apple, just as the redness and taste are not the ripeness of the apple. They are all effects of the body's interaction with the apple and the light reflecting off of it. Redness is about the ripeness of the apple and the reflected light and your visual system. Any difference in any of those three causes leads to a different effect. Shut the lights off and the apple is black, not red, even though it's ripeness has not changed.When I perceive an apple, I'm not just aware of the apple's color or its taste, I'm also aware of it's shape and weight. Some qualities of human experience are the basis for science. But if color and taste are illusions, what reason would we have for supposing that shape and weight are not? — Marchesk
So preferences are not identical to genetic and environmental phenomena, which is to say preferences are based on something that arent preferences. Another way we could say it and it mean the same thing is that preferences depend on genetic and environmental phenomena.Preferences are brain states. Mental phenomena are identical to particular brain states.
Brain states/mental phenomena are not identical to genetics and environmental factors, though those things are important factors in why brains develop as they do. — Terrapin Station
Then what are you saying - that preferences are brain states, which are also genetic and environmental phenomena? I thought they were mental phenomena. How do you distinguish between genetic and environmental phenomena and brain states, or is it all the same to you? Is a preference an interaction between genetics and environment? Is that what a brain state is - an interaction between genetic and environmental phenomena?That would only be the case if you're defining "based on" as being about contributing factors that aren't identical to what we're talking about. But of course, one wouldn't have to use "based on" that way. — Terrapin Station
Knowing how to do something is more like applied knowledge. One might know the steps but never performed the steps and gets better with experience. In this case, knowledge comes in the form of degrees of behavioral effeciency. One can know how to add larger numbers faster, or tie their shoes more efficiently, because of experience.For my part, I think we are wrong to think of a distinction between knowing that and knowing how. It seems to me that all examples of knowing that reduce to examples of knowing how.
So knowing that 2+2=4 reduces to knowing how to do addition. Knowing that Canberra is the capital of Australia reduces to knowing how to use maps and political notions. Knowing that this is a photo of N. reduces to knowing how to address N, identify him in a group, ask him about his wife and so on. — Banno
Again the mental is "merely biological." It's a term for a subset of properties of brain function. Brains are biological, obviously. Why anyone has the preferences then due to brain states, which are the way they are via a combo of genetics and environmental factors. — Terrapin Station
They're certainly not based on something that's not one's preferences. — Terrapin Station
:meh: Uh, yeah. That is exactly what I'm saying that you are doing with your subjective/objective distinction - saying confused (contradictory) things.We went through this dance before, if you recall, but the special thing about it, which I mentioned above, is that people keep saying confused things about the properties and relationships of mental to non-mental things. It's one of the more popular confusions when approaching anything like philosophical talk. — Terrapin Station
