DavidByron
Unregistered
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2012
- Messages
- 132
And I think the answer is just right under our noses -- that you are focused on the experience, actively thinking about it, in the latter case but not the former. And since every case where we wonder about qualia involves thinking, and actually focusing on the experience of something like seeing red, it seems to me that explaining qualia is as simple as just thinking about an experience -- like thinking about seeing red.
Well I suppose the mind can fill in stuff for you a lot so maybe a lot of the stuff we think we are conscious of we're not really. For that matter you could question, for example if you were ever conscious at any point in the past.
"How can I tell that the past isn't a fiction designed to account for the discrepancy between my immediate physical sensations and my state of mind?"
--Douglas Adams
That doesn't seem all that plausible, but it seems a lot more plausible that our consciousness just wobbles in and out and we're not aware of it because whenever we try and think about it our brain calculates some suitably bland set of memories, like it conjures up suitably bland bits of our visual field to cover the blind spot. People often have the sense that they just skipped a few minutes and "woke up" especially while doing some boring semi-automatic process (like driving a car
So I don't know for sure if I really see red out of the corner of my eye as it were, ie without focusing on the red. But it looks like you have several possibilities there (ignoring the past)
(1) aware of red out of the corner of your eye - does this really happen?
(2) focusing on red but not thinking about the redness
(3) thinking about redness without looking at anything red
(4) both focusing on red and thinking about red
Where by "focusing on" I mean directing your vision to center on the thing, and by 'thinking about' I mean probably some internal dialogue about it. You're saying you can't do (2) but I can. I am not sure if I can do (1). maybe if there was a lot of red.
To elicit a memory and not have it contaminated by your current thoughts would entail somehow doing it without thinking about it, and I don't see how memory can be consciously accessed in such a way.
Hypnosis maybe? I think you just have to be good at thinking about nothing. Medication maybe? Drunk?
when I am not thinking about seeing red, I have no idea what it is like to see red. Maybe I am different than most people, but that is just the way my brain works -- when I am sitting here typing, the red portions of the screen are just another aspect of my visual field. It isn't until I look at them and think "red" that I am "experiencing seeing red."
Can you look at the red and think about an elephant, or nothing at all?