AndySir wrote:UndercoverElephant wrote:AndySir wrote:In your terms, then, I don't believe that consciousness exists and I am not conscious.
In most ordinary people's terms, you are claiming that there is no such thing as consciousness.
An appeal to the masses now? Common knowledge?
What I am doing is saying that you are denying the thing that most people consider to be just about the most completely obvious thing they could think of. That's not just stupid sheep-like people ("the masses"). It's also large amounts of educated and intelligent people.
You are denying your own consciousness. If that's what you want to do then fine, but don't kid yourself that this anything other than a very bizarre thing to believe. Maybe even more bizarre than thinking the moon landings didn't happen.
UndercoverElephant wrote:AndySir wrote:
On existence. Any putative aliens would be detectable to themselves.
What use is that to us? A small teapot-lifeform orbiting pluto would also be detectable to itself.
It is nevertheless possible to be detected because it interacts with the universe. Your subjective experience does not.
So says you. Precisely how do you know this? Did
science tell you? If not, what did?
If I've got a headache and I end up taking a painkiller is it not the case that my subjective experience interacted with the universe? Is it not the case that I only took the painkiller because I was experiencing pain?
UndercoverElephant wrote:AndySir wrote:
They interact with the universe. A change in subjective experience is detectable to nothing in the universe.
Isn't it? So when you tread on my foot and it hurts a lot and I scream in pain because it hurts, this is not detectable to anything in the universe?
That is not a change in subjective experience...
Nonsense, Andy. When you tread on my foot then it changes my subjective experience.
- you seem to be taking that to mean seeing red changing to not seeing red. You are arguing that your consciousness is what it is to see red.
You're damned right I am....
What it is to feel pain is not detectable in this scenario.
Isn't it?
A patient goes to a doctor and says they have a pain in their back. The doctor tries pressing various points on the patient's back. Here? No. Here? No. Here? Arghhhh, yes, right there!!!
According to you, the doctor isn't able to detect when you are feeling pain - he can't detect the point where your subjective experience changes from NO PAIN to PAIN.
Which is, of course, total nonsense.
OK, let's get this straight.
I am currently talking to a person who is (a) a materialist and (b) thinks Kant supports his position.
Is that correct?
I think materialism is an accurate statement of my position based on the wiki definition I've just looked up. I don't know if Kant supports that position...
If there's one person in philosophical history who rained on the naive materialist's parade it was Emmanual Kant.
but I do know that he dismissed the ontological argument, which I can also do less stringently via reductio ad absurdum. Where does that leave us?
Exactly where we were before, given that the ontological argument has nothing to do with anything we've been talking about.
I note you ignored the question about information, which I think is a pretty big flaw in this subjective experience argument. I'm bringing out the numbers again...
1. Consciousness can only be explained via subjective experience.
Don't understand this. Consciousness *IS* subjective experience.
2. All physical objects can be described objectively (molecules in motion)
Agreed.
3. The brain is a physical object.
Agreed.
4. Subjective experience in contained within the brain.
Not agreed, because it is incomprehensible drivel. Subjective experience isn't "contained" in anything. It does not have a location. If I slice open your skull and rummage around inside then I will not find any subjective experience.
Alternatively subjective experience is not contained within the brain or any other physical form of information (the only possible position you can hold without abandoning the idea of qualia or denying the principle that information cannot be destroyed). You then require a mechanism for storing information outside the physical universe and for transferring it to the physical universe.
Not quite. Let me give you an analogy. Think of the setup of a cinema. So you have some information stored on a reel of film, you have a projector, and you have a big screen. When you turn on the projector a moving picture appears on the big screen. Did I need a mechanism for storing information outside of the reel of film? No. I
did require a mechanism for copying the information from one place to another, but here the analogy breaks down. There would have to be some sort of connection, but "mechanism" is a word for an explicitly
physical connection and we are talking about metaphysics here. The "mechanism" in question would have to be specified in an intepretation of quantum mechanics.
So there is a very simple Occam's razor argument to be made here: either there is another plane of existence beyond the physical or the question "What is red like?" is meaningless. That looks like a pretty clear choice to me.
Then you need to be introduced to Kant.
Are you familiar with the terms "phenomena" and "noumena"? If not, then please do some googling.
Now...how does "the plane of existence of the physical" correspond to phenomena and noumena? When you say "the physical", do you mean phenomena, noumena, both or neither?
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)