Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
Okay, but it seems to be localized to the organic structure of brains, at least so far. And so you are just lumping a lot of different things into one large category? And that is qualia?I'm dealing with experience in the most general sense. I'm not insisting on an implied Cartesian self - just the very fact of the perception itself.
Well the only thing we know is that reality appears to exist and that we appear to be in 'it'. But what about the consistency of controlled replication?I don't object to anyone doubting the reality of the perception, except if they then decide to assign certain objective reality to the things perceived, which seems clearly backwards to me.
That seems to imply the consistency of 'it'. Whatever it may be.
The experience is entirely subjective. Experience can't be objective. And there's no physical theory that deals with subjective experience.
That last statement is a blanket statement and seems to be a categorization of apriori.
If 'objective' is translated to 'capable of being modeled and predicted in a controlled setting', does that make sense?
You can alter the 'experience' through the intervention of the biological mechanism (in appearance, not an actual description), by pressing on nerves you can produce paid (yonkyo in aikido), by pressing on eyeballs you can produce patterns and images, through electrical stimulation you can produce all sorts of experience, through the unethical and ethical cutting of nerves you can stop experience.
So regardless of the substrate of 'it', it would appear that you model the production of experience , and the model of appearance 'biological mechanism', seems to offer a way of explaining the 'experience' at a level of a model of appearances.
(Please note, I have avoided any ontological references, as an objective pragmatist, I do not think it matters what the ultimate origin is, it can be mind or energy and it makes no difference.)