The SEP is an excellent resource, and in section 2 we have a discussion showing that it is not straightforward to find an inverted spectrum scenario that is clearly behaviorally-invariant (and as we will see, my argument is not defeated by the existence of some scenarios that are.)
— A Raybould
You're confusing your opinion with your argument. The stuff in section 2 is a different argument than what you've presented... — InPitzotl
some of the arguments in that section are in fact decent and relevant, but they do also presume things about color processing for which we really need more detail... Since these are L1 like properties, inverting the mappings from L1 to L2 colors may still carry these properties — InPitzotl
"Too vague" seems to have become your default response, but by itself, it is too... vague?
— A Raybould
It's not exactly a default response so much as it is prompted: — InPitzotl
Are there any non-vague metrics of vagueness, and more-or-less objective thresholds? The falsifiability criterion of science provides one (despite not being directed specifically at vagueness alone), and it is an appropriate one here: Vague claims (such as of vagueness exceeding some unspecified threshold) are not falsifiable.
What I am saying here could be falsified; a (not-yet-achieved) causal model of how the human brain produces a mind would reveal whether, to a first-order approximation, most humans are undergoing the same physical functions when they experience color. That's good enough for a hypothesis. — A Raybould
A more parsimonious expectation, however, is that this multi-generational training has produced brains that function alike, to a first approximation. If they did not, how likely is it that they would have, so to speak, 'learned the lessons' imparted by evolution?
— A Raybould
...in relation to the topic at hand, this is indeed too vague. Your expectation is more parsimonious than what exactly? Function alike in what ways? What "learned lessons"? I'm perfectly happy to say that human brains evolved in human like ways, but that does not really imply same-experience unless you can connect the similarity of human evolution to the similarity of color experience, which I've yet to see. Other than that, it's yet another nature versus nurture debate. Truth is, both nature and nurture make brains, especially human brains. — InPitzotl
My point is based on empirical fact: if variation is routinely producing children that have markedly different functional responses to color stimuli than their parents, then how come we only very rarely see those variations that do not result in observable differences?
— A Raybould
Because, for example, predators aren't examining your brain with fMRI to see if you represent redness on this spot or that spot or using this average frequency of pulses or that frequency? The important thing from a fitness perspective is that you run away, hide, or fight the predator appropriately. — InPitzotl
The alternative is so lacking in plausibility that I will not bother to reply until specific arguments for it are presented.
— A Raybould
That's your choice, but in effect, given that you're the one claiming to be supporting a proposal that the experiential correlates have a fitness advantage, not answering the question absolutely equates to not addressing the very thing your proposal is supposed to be about. If your proposal is about a tie between fitness and particular experiential correlates of color, it is backed if and only if you can demonstrate what it is about... i.e., tie fitness to experiential correlates of color. This is what I mean by relevance [my emphasis.] — InPitzotl
I do not think it is very speculative to say that our mental abilities are strong determinants of fitness (unless, of course, one thinks our experiences are epiphenomenal.)
— A Raybould
In what way?
— InPitzotl
The alternative is so lacking in plausibility that I will not bother to reply until specific arguments for it are presented. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. — A Raybould
For physicalists, where there is no physical difference, there is no difference simpliciter.
— A Raybould
Sure. So let's focus on the correlates, since that's where the difference would be.
And what are those correlates?
— A Raybould
I don't know, but I think that's the key question. In terms of L1 colors, there are reasonable explanations of development that are works in progress but involve self organization; these generally produce opponent color processes. Example:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fncir.2014.00016/full
This itself requires a bit more study. In terms of color perception in the brain, as I said before, we know there are multiple places of analysis. But there's also the possibility of potential signal space (such as these toy models of potential Poisson rates)... and since the signals potentially start this way there may be transference from these signal rates to positions, or not. But "qualia" may be more complex than many philosophers tend to treat it as well; e.g., there's such a thing as pain that doesn't hurt, suggesting that qualia aren't necessarily singular in the first place. This might be explained as pain in practice actually having separable pieces that typically are co-associated but not essentially so, and the same could possibly be true of color. What we're looking at developmentally for different-experience would be any sort of theory that starts with this brain in a semi-random developmental state and just "settles into" the "nearest corners". The entire question here (that has not yet actually been addressed) is how many "corners" are there, why are there that many, and how do the L1 colors map into them? Assuming opponency-sized "corners", a same-experience theory would postulate four to six of them, and some sort of specific developmental pathway whereby particular opponent signals latch into the specific four (or six) that they're supposed to map to.[my emphasis.] — InPitzotl
What I am saying here could be falsified
— A Raybould
...I'm fine with that, but "adequately justified" is more akin to what you're saying being verified. — InPitzotl
Argument and counter-argument are the principal methods of philosophy
— A Raybould
Yes, but counterarguments should not have to require an opposition taking a side to provide the counterarguments, and most certainly should not require the opposition to hold the countering view as an opinion... — InPitzotl
Also, two people discussing a thing need not necessarily each pick a corner and box; it's entirely possible, and may even be more productive, for the two to simply walk hand in hand from corner to corner. — InPitzotl
So, let's get back to tetrachromacy. Let's suppose we introduce a new gene in the human gene pool, call it OPN1MW3. OPN1MW3 expresses in people who have it by producing an M cone with spectral sensitivity shifted towards blue by the same amount (measured in frequency) that M shifts L spectral sensitivity towards blue; let's call this a N cone. This gene is an allele for the M on the X chromosome. So suppose we have: (a) Adam, who has L, M, and S cones; (b) Bill, who has L, N, and S cones; (c) Cindy, who has L, M, N, and S cones. So here are some questions. (a1) Is Adam likely to be a trichromat? (b1) Is Bill? (c1) Is Cindy more likely to be a tetrachromat or a trichromat?
(c1) is the interesting question... but regardless of its answer we still have followups. If the developmental process is such that Cindy's likely to become a tetrachromat, then there are questions about what exactly causes the L2 colors that Bill sees; your hypothesis suggests it's some built-in gene, but if self organization suffices to establish L2 colors this is questionable. But if Cindy is only a tetrachromat if she has some other specific gene, some BN (brain-gene-N analog; here, this is just a generic referent... it could be more than one gene), that pre-structures her brain, then we must also ask whether Bill can have that gene as well, or under what conditions precisely Bill sees what Cindy sees that Adam doesn't see.
Your hypothesis seems to require a "BM" gene of sorts. Okay, we have the human genome mapped out... so which gene is BM? — InPitzotl
The point isn't to simply maintain some position with unreasonable standards though. The point is to require relevance. The thing being talked about here is the actual stuff happening between our ears in our soft pink squishy warm brains, that has to do with our subjective conscious experience of colors. Some discussion of and/or constraints on how that subjective experience's correlates develop is necessary to provide a theory of how much the subjective experience's correlates can vary. Without having that discussion or addressing what those constraints are, you're just plain not having the required conversation [my emphasis.] — InPitzotl
I am guessing that your emphasis on 'established' indicates that you were aware of this, but I had in mind cerebral and congenital achromatopsia and dyschromatopsia, color agnosia
— A Raybould
Achromatopsia and dyschromatopsia are the same modes of L1 level color deficiencies previously discussed (though there are acquired forms). Color agnosia as far as I'm aware is a defect of the ventral stream, which is particularly interesting for awareness of L2 colors at all (if not L2 modes of color at all). I would be interested in an L2 specific defect. — InPitzotl
While your stated goal, apparently, is to show that the notion that our experiences are similar to a first approximation does not achieve hypothesis-hood
— A Raybould
I've no objection to same-experience as a hypothesis. My objection is claiming that the hypothesis is adequately justified prematurely. — InPitzotl
Therefore, I do not accept this premise, though I will accept this:
You make it sound as though what preceded this sentence was an argument against premise one of my argument, but it was not. All you do is point out a pretty obvious, iterative distinction between a state and its description. — jkg20
Against premise 4 you state:
I cannot accept this, either, as only a small amount of all physically-encodable information is the information content of knowledge.
But that does not speak to premise 4 at all, within which there is no mention of knowledge, it is a metaphysical, not epistemological premise. — jkg20
↪A Raybould
(especially given the distinction you made between 'expressible' and 'can be stated' in your previous post.)
That is not the distinction I made. Please reread the post. — jkg20
The claim that Mary learns something from seeing colors is a premise of Jackson's argument, and yours too, if I am not mistaken.
You are mistaken. My argument that you are referring to contained the conditional premise that if one accepts that Mary gains knowledge, then there is an obligation to say something substantive about what she gains. Jackson's argument states that Mary gains knowledge. — jkg20
↪A Raybould
What (if anything) Mary learns from seeing colors is either discursively-learnable or it is not. We can consider these two cases separately.
OK, so this argument puts off the question of accepting whether or not Mary learns anything [my emphasis.] — jkg20
I guess against this argument, the skeptic would have to push the investigation of the supposed distinction between knowledge being discursively learnable and knowledge being physically encodeable. — jkg20
So, a premise of the Churchland/Crane/whoever argument is that there is a distinction between knowledge that is discursively learnable and knowledge, the content of which is entirely encodeable in a physical medium. — jkg20
Content is propositional. Even if one accepts the idea of non conceptual content, that is not to accept the idea that there is content that cannot be expressed in terms of propositions, it is just to accept that the person having the mental state with that content need not have the resources to state those propositions. — jkg20
So if all content is propositional, then not only is all discursively learnable knowledge physically encodeable, all physically encodeable knowledge is expressable as propositions and so is discursively learnable[my emphasis] — jkg20
the Crane/Churchland line seems to force the skeptic to a position in which they will have to defend the following modus tollens:
1 If some item of knowledge is physically encodeable, then it is discursively learnable
2 The item of knowledge Mary gains is not discursively learnable
_________________________
The item of knowledge Mary gains is not physically encodeable — jkg20
See section 3: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qualia-inverted/ — InPitzotl
More generally - and I think it covers all the points you have raised here - you are saying that there are cases where disparate experiences would have no observable behavioral effects, and I am saying that nevertheless, there are other cases in which they would
— A Raybould
I agree on that part, but I think you're confused. You specifically asked me for arguments to support that our color experiences were fundamentally different... I provided them [your ellipsis.] — InPitzotl
You have attempted to dismiss this as my attempt to impute attitudes to researchers
— A Raybould
Not exactly... I've pointed out a situation where you're basically guessing researchers share your view and then appealing to the researchers having your view, which is basically an appeal to authority as a fallacy. — InPitzotl
You have attempted to dismiss this as my attempt to impute attitudes to researchers, but itis actually based on the empirical fact that these multiple-subject studies work, and that it is uncontroversial to generalize the results from the studies' subjects to the general population. — A Raybould
The description here in terms of evolution sounds a bit Lamarckian. — InPitzotl
If they did not, how likely is it that they would have, so to speak, 'learned the lessons' imparted by evolution?
— A Raybould
Too vague and hand wavy still. — InPitzotl
If a child's high-level brain function can vary markedly from that of its parents, how likely is it that it would nevertheless still be behaviourally similar enough that the child has approximately the same level of that part of its fitness that comes from its mental abilities?
We're not talking about high level brain functions here. We're talking about the experiential correlate of a color. — InPitzotl
Alternatively, what sort of mechanism would be needed to conserve the external behaviour in the face of internal variation?
— A Raybould
Any isomorphic mechanism would do the trick. Instead of using high and low circuits for 1's and 0's, we could use magnets being in the same or different directions. It doesn't really matter, so long as a change is a change. Instead of encoding y as glucose in the solution we could encode it as maltodextrin. — InPitzotl
We cannot depend on evolution doing that, as evolution is itself dependent on the conservation of fitness traits from parent to offspring.
— A Raybould
Evolution is only selecting for fitness where it matters. If a variation does not affect fitness where it matters, evolution would not care about that variation. You're in effect just begging the question; you're assuming that the variations would have an effect on fitness and then arguing that evolution would select those out: — InPitzotl
we can have various colors of our irises because the particular hue of their pigment does not strongly determine fitness and so is not strongly selected for.
— A Raybould
So green versus blue eyes don't seem to matter much to fitness. — InPitzotl
I do not think it is very speculative to say that our mental abilities are strong determinants of fitness (unless, of course, one thinks our experiences are epiphenomenal.)
— A Raybould
In what way? — InPitzotl
So this is all speculative, but I wrote this earlier, and you said at the time that you accepted it:
— A Raybould
...not quite, but the disagreements are in the weeds (e.g. it's possible to formulate a theory before a hypothesis)... and not quite useful for this discussion. — InPitzotl
Furthermore, what are the counter-arguments, other than that it is speculative, which isn't a fatal flaw in a mere hypothesis?
— A Raybould
Counter-arguments fall back to debate mentality. What we're really interested in is the truth... — InPitzotl
...So the analysis to be done on a hypothesis is to explore the ways in which the hypothesis could reasonably fail. That's what I've been doing here. — InPitzotl
but how are these flaws ["hasty generalization" and "personal incredulity"] manifest in this particular argument?— A Raybould
It's very simple... — InPitzotl
To adequately justify this, you need to show how evolution is inconsistent with different-experience. — InPitzotl
...The first argument you advanced failed very quickly with a sanity check; green-eyed people not being universal suggests that evolution doesn't always produce universal traits. — InPitzotl
you seem to beg the question by thinking backwards about it, something along the lines of "if different-experiences were had, there would be differences in fitness". I claim this is backwards because you're trying to start at evolutionary fitness and then conclude same-experience — InPitzotl
The argument rather is that evolution is compatible with different-experience theory. — InPitzotl
But the actual stated position I'm taking is a non-position [my emphasis.] — InPitzotl
So according to these established modes of color blindness (and tetrachromacy), they are in fact at the L1 level. — InPitzotl
This is how you originally engaged me:
It doesn't approach being a proof, but, IMHO, it is a plausible hypothesis. Per my earlier post, I would not propose that everyone's experience is the same in detail, but that for most people, there is a broad degree of functional equivalence.
— A Raybould
What arguments are there for the proposition that everyone experiences things fundamentally differently?
— A Raybould — InPitzotl
Or do the three of us just have different intuitions about how different they are? — A Raybould
Do you see what I'm getting at?
— InPitzotl
I think I do, and I think we are talking at cross-purposes. You are saying that these differences exist, and I am saying that they are second-order effects, modifying an underlying commonality. We could both be right! (Or wrong.) Alternatively, we could just agree to disagree in our opinions and wait for neuroscience to achieve a more fine-grained picture than fMRI and related technologies has delivered so far. — A Raybould
Also, obviously, we don't actually agree that our L2 colors are similar... otherwise, philosophers wouldn't brandish about terms like "inverted spectrum". — InPitzotl
Please explain how the conclusion follows from the premise.
— A Raybould
It's almost a direct translation. L2 colors are our experiences. An inverted spectrum philosophically is by definition an inversion of the experience of colors, ergo, it would be an inversion of the L1 color space mapping to the L2 colors. — InPitzotl
Are you arguing that if the functional mappings are equivalent (say, in the sense that if the behaviors of ranking things into categories are the same), that this implies that the experiences are the same? — InPitzotl
If I experience red a different way than you experience red, wouldn't we still both call red things red? — InPitzotl
In scientific inquiry, theories are preceded by hypotheses. You don't have to believe them, just consider them. Of course, if there is contrary evidence rendering a hypothesis unviable, then it is summarily rejected and science moves on, but that does not seem to be the case here. — A Raybould
But the argument here is, at least IMO, trivially made. The arguments given for same-experience to me sound like classic textbook hasty generalization. It seems you're describing an approach that is particularly vulnerable to argument from personal incredulity, and is way too quick on the belief button for my tastes. — InPitzotl
There's an implied hypothesis that the mapping would be linear. — InPitzotl
But in the end you still wind up at my position... that we simply need more study. — InPitzotl
Also, obviously, we don't actually agree that our L2 colors are similar... otherwise, philosophers wouldn't brandish about terms like "inverted spectrum". — InPitzotl
I cannot imagine why you think I am confusing L1 and L2, but there is nothing to be gained by following that any further.
— A Raybould
It's because you keep talking about behavioral responses and disagreements on whether all people would agree that particular things are red if they simply have different L2 colors but share L1 colors. — InPitzotl
Possible? Certainly. Likely? I was already of that opinion, based broadly on the sort of evidence and argument you are presenting here. Necessary? No; if we are going to suppose that everyones' experiences of color are different, without any constraint on how different they might be, then we cannot assume continuous variation, let alone any isomorphism between individuals, or even any stability within a single individual.Would we not be able to take a different 3D slice of this 4D L2-color space and have a second trichromat have this as his L2 colors, and still have the property in both individuals of having each of their L2 colors vary continuously in correlation to the 3D L1 color spaces? — InPitzotl
I think I allowed myself to be misrepresented, since if you are saying that the two premises of my argument concerning what it would be to have complete physical knowledge are up for grabs as well, sure, I'll concede that. — jkg20
If, on the other hand, a materialist monist says Mary now knows what it is like to see red, and that knowledge is physically encoded, then that means there is some set of propositions about Mary's physical state which describe what is encoded, and so expresses what it is she comes to know.[my emphasis.] — jkg20
This is moot, however, as, whatever else Mary's physical knowledge is, it must be something one can learn from books or lectures (Alter calls this 'discursively learnable.') The additional premise, then, becomes "after her release, Mary gains discursively learnable knowledge about color vision." This puts dualists on the horns of a dilemma: Unless what she learns on her release is discursively learnable, Churchland prevails, but if it is, then how come she did not learn it from her studies? It would be begging the question to just assert the premise that it must be nonphysical discursively-learnable knowledge. — A Raybould
But the arguments, Jackson's and mine, are based on the idea that Mary's knowledge is complete — jkg20
I'll back fill this with more detail for you some time later when I get time if you like. — InPitzotl
Is certainty an appropriate burden for some purpose here? — InPitzotl
...if you accept that Mary gains anything epistemologically, you are obliged to give an account of what she gains — jkg20
Do you see what I'm getting at? — InPitzotl
If I experience red a different way than you experience red, wouldn't we still both call red things red? — InPitzotl
Even if we admit that one gains the ability to remember and compare colours, it is unclear how or whether this is a gain of knowledge of any sort. — Luke
There is no equivocation in the argument I gave, which does not even end with the conclusion that physicalism is false [my emphasis] — jkg20
We just postulate that there's a large number of potential experiences and that the brain, while learning to see colors, simply picks any of these to bind to the interesting categories. — InPitzotl
At this point, my working hypothesis is that you do not have any plausible arguments for that proposition.
— A Raybould
Your working hypothesis doesn't work. — InPitzotl
But the argument here is, at least IMO, trivially made. The arguments given for same-experience to me sound like classic textbook hasty generalization. It seems you're describing an approach that is particularly vulnerable to argument from personal incredulity, and is way too quick on the belief button for my tastes. [my emphasis] — InPitzotl
Synesthesia demonstrates that there are different kinds of experiences to pick from, and that they can at least be useful in some people as category tags even cross-sensually. — InPitzotl
We just postulate that there's a large number of potential experiences and that the brain, while learning to see colors, simply picks any of these to bind to the interesting categories. — InPitzotl
7. Given Lemma 3 and premise 6, what Mary gains [is] not knowledge of a physical fact. — jkg20
In Jackson's usage, he is referring to knowledge of physics, but physicalism does not imply or depend on all knowledge being about physics; what it does imply is that knowledge cannot be gained without there being physical change within the entity doing the learning. — A Raybould
it is a plausible hypothesis.
— A Raybould
...and so is its null hypothesis. — InPitzotl
What arguments are there for the proposition that everyone experiences things [fundamentally] differently?
— A Raybould
I could think of arguments, but that's irrelevant. — InPitzotl
The only argument necessary is that it's plausible — InPitzotl
What I have, instead, is a standard... an expectation that I have of a theory before I start doing silly things like believing it — InPitzotl
... but to simply conclude that the color experiences are the same because we're all human sounds to me more like guesswork. — InPitzotl
If we define h-red to be the experience you have when you look at a red crayon, then this category would be completely useless... only Harry Hindu could relate to it. — InPitzotl
You will notice in many of the analyses of this 'thought-experiment' that it is simply taken for granted that states of being can be understood as brain states, but that in itself is simply an assumption. — Wayfarer
Many of these kinds of arguments date back a few decades, when there was the confident belief that eventually science would develop to the point where you could directly 'see' a brain state. But when fMRI became a reality, there are still many major conceptual difficulties in doing precisely that (see this) — Wayfarer
Jackson's use of the word "knew" needs to be clarified. — TheMadFool