No, it is an answer to a question you are asking.
I forgot where I asked about how water molecules experience the world. Refresh my memory, please.
But it is clearly an answer you refuse to accept -- even though you can find nothing wrong with it, other than that it removes human experience from the pedestal you wish to place it upon.
What I find wrong with the idea that water molecules
"experience" the world is that there is absolutely no evidence for any such phenomenon.
I agree that it is meaningless. It is done for consistency -- you know, that thing that dualism completely lacks?
I cannot see any merit in uttering meaningless statements in order to be consistent. If a theory requires meaningless statements to hold it together, that would lead me to think that it's a very shaky theory.
I cannot imagine a serious physicist giving a moment's attention to the idea that matter "experiences" the world. A water molecule
is a water molecule. That's the extent of its experience.
It's a
fact that consciousness has
only been observed in human beings. Naturally that's philosophically uncomfortable and if one has a core belief that human beings
aren't special or unique, then it's necessary to come up with some idea to prove this.
However, this is an idea which is based on nothing at all. There is simply nothing in physics, biology, chemistry, computer science, boat building or corporate finance which shows that a thermostat has some "experience" of being a thermostat. It is, as physical theories go, undetectable, unquatifiable, and doesn't explain a single observed phenomenon. It's just a way to get off a nasty philosophical hook. Building physical theories on philosphical preconceptions is a bad idea.
I dare say the homeopathy crowd would like the idea of water molecules having "experience".
It explains why your experience of you seeing red is different from your experience of me seeing red. It explains "qualia" and "subjective experience" and all the other issues of the HPC. In particular, it explains why they are non-issues.
This must be some special meaning of the word "explain" with which I am not familiar.
Q: A phenemonon we call consciousness arises due to the operation of the human brain and body. How is this?
A: Consciousness is a phenomenon which arises due to the operation of the human brain and body. It's nothing to worry about.
Q: Eh?
A: Y'see, Jimmy [takes boy on lap] you an' me, we feel the worl' in our way. Ol' man river, he see's the worl' his way. Wind an' de trees, dey see it dere way. It's all part of the Great Circle Of Life.
Q: Gee Granpa, guess I never thought of it like that. I won't worry 'bout it no more nohow!
A: That's my boy. You run along now. [pats Q's head, spits chaw of baccy]
Of course, if one assumes dualism to begin with, then it doesn't make sense to "explain away" the issues. If one does, then dualism disappears -- why would one want to do that when they are trying to prove the truth of dualism!
I will persist in demanding a physical theory for a physical phenomenon. How that gets translated into "proving the truth of dualism" I don't quite follow.