Q:
Yes.
My exchange with you has been within the context of explaining eliminative materialism. Eliminative materialists, as I've explained, don't accept that phenomenal consciousness exists.
Reductive materialists, of various stripes, do accept that it exists, and maintain that it supervenes on the physical, one way or the other.
Metaphysical materialists accept that phenomenal consciousness exists, and that it does not supervene on the physical, but maintain that, as a consequence of strong metaphysical necessity, it's physical anyway.
Property dualists accept that phenomenal consciousness exists, and that it doesn't supervene on the phsyical, reject metaphysical materialism and maintain that therefore phenomenal consciousness is an additional fundamental feature of the world.
As a consequnce of further laws of nature.
Paul:
Yes, we could. And I do.
As a consequence of having the physical correlate, the physical memory, of having sen red before.
You have no "memory of the phenomenal experience." Rather, you have a memory of the information processing. Experiencing the memory contains an experience of familiarity that comes from the physical correlate.
Is it a fact?
Yes.
IMO (unless I am misunderstanding), the problem has nothing to do to with accepting that phenomenal consciousness exists but with the explanation or description of its cause and origin.
My exchange with you has been within the context of explaining eliminative materialism. Eliminative materialists, as I've explained, don't accept that phenomenal consciousness exists.
Reductive materialists, of various stripes, do accept that it exists, and maintain that it supervenes on the physical, one way or the other.
Metaphysical materialists accept that phenomenal consciousness exists, and that it does not supervene on the physical, but maintain that, as a consequence of strong metaphysical necessity, it's physical anyway.
Property dualists accept that phenomenal consciousness exists, and that it doesn't supervene on the phsyical, reject metaphysical materialism and maintain that therefore phenomenal consciousness is an additional fundamental feature of the world.
What answer does dualism give to explain by which means physical and phenomenal states correlate?
As a consequnce of further laws of nature.
Paul:
Of course there is. All the brain processes that occur when I see red are the physical experience of red. I guess you don't like using the word experience here, but what else is it? I suppose we could call it the physical processing of red.
Yes, we could. And I do.
I'm focusing specifically on having had the phenomenal experience of red before. When I see red again, or think about red, I get the sense that I've had the feeling of red, the redness of red, the emotion of red, before.
As a consequence of having the physical correlate, the physical memory, of having sen red before.
If you don't think that the phenomenal experience of red can be explained by the brain alone, then I do not see how you can claim that the memory of having had these phenomenal experiences can be explained by the brain alone. Phenomenal consciousness must have memory.
You have no "memory of the phenomenal experience." Rather, you have a memory of the information processing. Experiencing the memory contains an experience of familiarity that comes from the physical correlate.