rocketdodger
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2005
- Messages
- 6,946
It seems to me that most of you dismissing the term "qualia" are sweeping the "problem" of private experiences under a rug, without explaining either: Where they come from and how they emerge; or if qualia isn't really real: then how the delusion of qualia comes about.
We want to understand the phenomena of private experiences. Not wave them off as a waste of time.
People are dismissing the idea that qualia are something distinct from experiences, not that experiences exist altogether, or even actually that qualia exist altogether.
Nobody denies that experiences exist -- that would be utterly stupid.
But the argument that qualia are distinct from experiences, and need their own explanation, or even an explanation above and beyond whatever the explanation for experiences is, just has no logical merit.
This is why:
Define experience as what it is like to be something.
Define qualia as the experience of an experience. So, a meta-experience.
Define meta-qualia as the experience of qualia, or the experience of the experience of an experience.
.
.
.
Define meta-n-quala as the experience of n-1 experiences of experiences, or the experience of the experience of ... the experience of an experience.
Pretty pointless, huh?
So if the nth meta abstraction of qualia is pointless, why isn't the first meta abstraction pointless? Why isn't the notion of "the experience of an experience" pointless and redundant?
Well ... many people say it is. That's what they mean when they say qualia don't exist. Its the same as saying a circular circle doesn't exist.
Last edited: