In curiousity, is this how you go about refuting narrow-minded materialisms?Originally posted by Interesting Ian re BillHoyt
Thought you must have me on ignore.
How disappointing . . . [/B]
ME
In curiousity, is this how you go about refuting narrow-minded materialisms?Originally posted by Interesting Ian re BillHoyt
Thought you must have me on ignore.
How disappointing . . . [/B]
Is that a dualistic demo of the cliche "It takes one to know one"?BillHoyt in re Dymanic said:Dynamic,
Keep in mind you are debating with Ian, one of the few people with the sheer audacity to quote an author and immediately follow the quote with an outright distortion.
Why bother with Dennett at all?Interesting Ian said:Real? What does he mean by real? Exists perhaps? Why should everything that exists have properties?
A lot, if there is any meaning at all.What meaning might conscious experiences have in abstraction from qualia?
Why pose something so meaningless?Let's try to imagine we experience a bright summers day, but with no felt like qualities (ie qualia). I submit this is meaningless.
Neglecting Dennett, I'd answer "Chocolate flavor" for starters if you are a normal human being.What properties? What properties does my experience of the taste of chocolate have?
My guess:I don't think they are properties at all. What are they properties of??
That's your assumption. Isn't that exactly what BillHoyt might be asking some posters to challenge, their starting assumptions (in one way or another)?Qualia most definitely exist. Of this we can be more certain than anything. Even more certain than the existence of the self.
Mr. E said:
This strikes me as a mistake. Blind people might not have ordinary visual qualia but still be able to pose questions, even about questions of sight. Posing a question is an act of will, not a matter of passive sense perception the usual ground of qualia. Without qualia the question might tend to be less coherent or more indefinite, but it could still be posed, even if by a poseur.
ME
Dennet?Originally posted by BillHoyt in re nobody
Okay, now that the dialogue is finally building about the qualia question, I'm going to make the question clearer. Here is Dennett on the qualia problem:... "Quining Qualia
You want someone to defend the Louis Armstrong definition of qualia? Why?So when I ask for a falisifcation of "qualia," it is this definition for which I want one of the dualists to tell us - now - how we would ever be able to muster evidence against the notion.
I've heard of "neural correlates of consciousness" but what would "physical correlates of qualia" amount to?If they can offer a better definition of "qualia" so that the test for physical correlates can, in principle, be devised, then we've got a concept with which to work.
My redoubled response to your inquiry stands, despite your apparent ignorance of it. Maybe it's not at all what you were looking for.But we've seen, so far, the quality of qualia answers, haven't we? I'm still waiting for something better than Ian's feint.
Oh? Source please? You seem to make the term so broad that it loses specific meaning.davidsmith73 said:But even a question that is in the form of mentalese (thought) is qualia.
Is? Not all thought is experienced directly as ordinary qualia.Any experience is qualia.
Which materialist is your client here? Feel free to not think here, but this is a critical thinking forum. I don't get how will is entirely irrelevant to the question of consciousness and qualia. Maybe you could show me.With regards to the question being an act of will, that may or may not be the case. A materialist would surely disagree with you. Either way, I don't think the subject of will has to be relavant here.
Mr. E said:Oh? Source please? You seem to make the term so broad that it loses specific meaning.
Is? Not all thought is experienced directly as ordinary qualia.
Which materialist is your client here? Feel free to not think here, but this is a critical thinking forum. I don't get how will is entirely irrelevant to the question of consciousness and qualia. Maybe you could show me.
ME
Why?davidsmith73 said:A thought has to feel like something doesn't it?
To extend the notion of qualia to include everything seems meaningless to me.To limit the notion of qualia to sensory experiences seems illogical to me.
"its qualia"? What is the limit as quale-content goes to zero?I don't understand how an experience can be void of its qualia.
Does all cognition have qualia-existence? Why?To be so would mean the experience does not exist.
I have no reason to believe that mentalese is more than a handy fiction, whether qualia exist or not.To me, qualia are what experiences are made of. I assme you agree that mentalese are included in the category of an experience?
I don't recall mentioning "free will".Free will is irrelevant to the issue of whether mentalese has qualia if you regard free will as an independent quale in itself. If you regard free will as being intrinsic to the mentalese then this is a semantic issue and free will has the same quale as the thought.
davidsmith73 said:Have been unable to post messages of the last few days for some reason. Anyway, I'll try to answer to your question -
I think to ask how qualia can be falsified is a statement with no meaning. It is by virtue of qualia that you are able to ask the question in the first place. If there were no qualia then you would not be asking the question and I would not be able to read it or answer it. So a prediction of the lack of existence of qualia would be a lack of consciousness. This is clearly not the case since consciousness is required in order to pose the falsifiability question. A bit of a paradox indeed. I think therefore I am.
Still reading the Dennet link
Dennett...Mr. E said:Dennet?
whom, apparently, you didn't read.You want someone to defend the Louis Armstrong definition of qualia? Why?
Yes, and invisible unicorns are pink, whether they exist or not.Maybe you could distinguish the differences among: subjective, personal, private. As far as I'm concerned qualia are objective and private, whether they exist or not.
I expanded "neural correlates" to "physical correlates" since qualia are so ill-defined.I've heard of "neural correlates of consciousness" but what would "physical correlates of qualia" amount to?
As I said, it was utter pseudomathematical nonsense. I want you to describe a way to falsify "qualia."My redoubled response to your inquiry stands, despite your apparent ignorance of it. Maybe it's not at all what you were looking for.
Dymanic said:I can see how you might be confused, and am willing to give the benefit of the doubt by assuming that you actually are confused, rather than being deliberately disingenuous.
Let's look again at what he actually said:
"...I grant that conscious experience has properties."
[but]
"...experience has no properties that are special in any of the ways qualia have been supposed to be special."
In other words, he does not see consciousness as having any special properties such as qualia.
Mr. E said:Originally posted by Interesting Ian re BillHoyt
Thought you must have me on ignore.
How disappointing . . .
In curiousity, is this how you go about refuting narrow-minded materialisms?
BillHoyt said:This is nothing more than a bald assertion, then. You have a soul. It is obvious; the soul is what animates you. You wouldn't be able to ask the question if you didn't have a soul.
Originally posted by davidsmith73
But even a question that is in the form of mentalese (thought) is qualia.
E
Oh? Source please? You seem to make the term so broad that it loses specific meaning.
What is wrong with it is that it indicates that you have not understood -- much less 'addressed' -- what Dennett has said. This is consistent with your continued refusal to actually read his books.Originally posted by Interesting Ian
Dymanic, I have already addressed what Dennett has said. What is wrong with the response I have already provided?
So it wasn't just me after all!Originally posted by davidsmith73
Have been unable to post messages of the last few days for some reason.
Dymanic said:What is wrong with it is that it indicates that you have not understood -- much less 'addressed' -- what Dennett has said. This is consistent with your continued refusal to actually read his books.
davidsmith73 said:Your definition of the "soul" - it is what animates you. How does this relate to the experience of asking a question ?
Or maybe he should just have simpler ideas.Originally posted by Interesting Ian
If I have not understood it then Dennett should explain himself better.
Dymanic said:Or maybe he should just have simpler ideas.
If some of Dennett's arguments are not easily understood, it is due in large part to their running contrary to some of our most deeply entrenched notions about consciousness. Despite this, I think he does an excellent job of explaining them. I don't think you do agree with his premises, but by relying only on second-hand versions, you place yourself at a disadvantage in attempting to refute them. You are like a blindfolded swordsman, vigorously thrusting here and there, but missing your opponent entirely.