U
Win said:
AS:
What I've said is that if I were a p-zombie I would behave exactly as if I weren't. In fact, I would believe that I wasn't a p-zombie. In my case, this is a true belief. In zombie Win's case, it's a false belief.
The existence of my phenomenal consciousness, to which I have direct access, renders my belief true. Of course, zombie Win would type that, too. But he'd be mistaken.
This is truly puzzling to me. If zombie Win would also believe he had phenomenal consciousness, then what makes you so confident that you're not a zombie?
Again, the visual field thing? If so, then why would zombie Win also type that? Why? Is he a liar or mistaken? How can he be mistaken if he has no visual field right there in front of him?
First of all, I think you're equivocating between two sense of the word principle. That something may be so, in principle, doesn't render that state of affairs a principle to be followed.
Yeah, I did do that, didn't I? Made for a nice segue, don't you think?
That being said, knowing myself to have phenomenal consciousness, why should I conclude that no one else does, simply because it could be so, in principle? That conclusion isn't forced on me.
And again, p-zombies don't exist in the world. That a p-zombie is conceivable doesn't mean there are any. Their actual existence isn't a feature of the argument.
You seem to think that because it's "silly" to suppose that other people are really p-zombies, we can¡t draw any conclusions from their conceivability. That's just not so.
I know that the actual existence of p-zombies isn't part of the argument. No, I don't think that it's silly just because they don't really exist, although, and I'm not telling you again, they don't really exist! LOL.
It's silly because it's incoherent. "Incoherent" means lacking internal consistency. The very definition of p-zombie seeks to have it both ways,
under a materialist framework.
Look, you cannot use the conceivability of p-zombies to demonstrate the falsity of materialism unless you postulate a priori that materialism is false. Any thoughtful materialist can see that p-zombies cannot be exactly like humans physically, yet lack subjective feel, as materialism holds that subjective feel is a necessary consequence of having a fully functioning physical brain. Therefore, p-zombies can't be p-zombies--they're humans instead, given your definition of them.
Here, I think you're defining "practicing dualist" as someone who believes evryone else is a p-zombie.
I suppose there could be some of those around. I don't know any. Easier to be a solipsist.
I've often wondered about this. Exactly how would one go about being a practicing solipsist? Wouldn't you stay in bed all the time and not eat or get up? Why would you need to? Think about it.
I suppose a truly practicing dualist who believed in the conceivability that p-zombies could exist and there is no way he could ever be sure if anyone but himself were a p-zombie might venture to treat everyone else as if they were unconscious automatons. What difference would it make?
By "practicing" I mean someone who put his money where his mouth is.
On the contrary, "assume the truth of materialism" appears nowhere in the conceivability argument that uses p-zombies.
Then how can it possibly be used to demonstrate the supposed falsity of materialism?
And if you have assumed the truth of materialism, an entity that is my physical duplicate must have all my properties, so must be conscious.
But only if you assume materialism is true.
Of course. My point exactly. That is why I believe p-zombies are an incoherent concept.
Not arguing with you here. Just pointing out that "assume materialism to be true" is an awfully convenient place from which to begin a defence of materialism.
It's not just convenient. It's necessary if the conceivability of p-zombies has any bearing at all on whether materialism must be false.
No, we haven't. Nor have we assumed it to be false.
Again, then what relevance do they have to materialism?
No. I just haven't taken your "assume materialism to be true" stance. There is a difference between not assuming materialism to be true and assuming materialism to be false. You do see that, don't you?
Ah, but Grasshopper, I do see the difference.
What you fail to grasp is what I thought was implicit. I and many others assume materialism as a default state. Why? Given how we observe science to work in all other matters--save quantum mechanics--consciousness has to arise from somewhere. If there is no there from which it can arise, then it must arise from within the only place it could--the brain. Your property dualism is nothing but speculation from the default perspective. We have looked at brains under eletron microscopes, and all we have seen are neurons and other cells. We have seen no "mind stuff" contained within brains.
Oh, we can't see it because it isn't physical? But even you admit it has to interact with or somehow be a property of the physical. If so, as Stimpy points out, then it must interact with the brain. How? There is no evidence, and there can be no evidence suseptible to empirical study, of such funky interaction. Therefore, either it's all just brains, or we can never know.
As Dennett contends, the dualist's position is essentially a surrender. We give up; we can never know. Why don't we just make up some stuff to explain it or give up looking?
What kind of defeatist nonsense is that?
I'm among the many who isn't willing to capitulate and declare that science cannot tell us, even in principle, where mind comes from. Many of us are pretty darn sure there is no "there" there. When we look at the brain, we are looking at the mind, unless it's not functioning sufficiently. It is indeed the result of the structure and process going on within it. Pretty cool, huh?
Just because it's somewhat mysterious as to the how, is no reason to dismiss it as untrue or impossible.
Consider how a new life is created, whether it's a human life or a maple tree. Until recently, no one had a clue where life came from, except to declare that it was outside the province of science and within that of religion. God gives us the miraculous gift of life.
Right. Now we accept that it's DNA and cell division. There's nothing "miraculous" about it. The truth is far more wondrous, however, than simply "God put it there."
I regard "mind" in an analogous fashion. It's not some miraculous mystery. It's neurons firing in concert.
Sure, studying "mind" is unique in that we have to use "mind" itself to study it. It doesn't make the subject matter a special case, however. It just presents unique difficulties.
Dualists are willing to concede that "mind" is an entirely unique kind of matter or interaction, unlike any elsewhere in nature. Given that we ultimately came from the process of nuclear fusion within massive stars, just as all other matter known to exist in the universe, I find it hard to swallow that there is a unique kind of matter found only within human brains, and nowhere else.
Consciousness Explained is a good book. The only problem is that, taking consciousness to mean HPC, it isn't. All the other parts are fine.
Too bad it was written before Chalmers' writings. It would be nice to see a direct rebuttal of Chalmers' arguments in it.
AS