Speak for yourself. When I dream I'm usually cognizant of the fact that its a dream and I'm often able to influence events in the dream. In any case, the contents of a dream are still reportable experiences.
It happens to me fairly regularily as well. But that's besides the point. Most people, most of the time, can't tell if they're dreaming. They can't tell if they're hallucinating. They can't tell if they're delusional. How reliable is introspection, then ?
Let me ask you: If those same delusional people were conducting scientific research would you consider their work reliable?
Sounds like a fairly serious condition. I've never had such a problem. Could you possibly cite some examples?
Have you never felt hunger after a physical effort you've made not long after eating ? You're getting a wrong sensation, obviously. Of course, I could also name a ton of optical illusions where your brain makes things up.
Whether or not you think your sensation of hunger is an appropriate response it's still a real sensation and is part of the contents of your awareness. Even in the case of illusions the subject is still experiencing the illusion regardless of whether or not it accurately reflects whats going on outside of their minds.
What is a more reliable indicator of consciousness than the subject's own conscious experience?
Aku, if reports were reliable, then all I'd have to do is program a computer to say "I am conscious". Obviously this isn't enough.
I'm not talking about self reports. I'm talking about introspection. A conscious person is tacitly aware of the contents of their mind and can directly access them. Being conscious is, for the conscious subject, proof positive that they are conscious regardless of whether or not they can report it to others. Your argument basically amounts to claiming that consciousness cannot be observed even by entities experiencing it directly.
Describing consciousness in computational terms is not sufficient to understand consciousness in itself, just as describing light in terms of information conveyance is not sufficient to understand it for what it is. My point here is to emphasize that consciousness must be primarily understood in physical terms before we are able to implement it in our technology. Again, consciousness is not a computational function or a kind of computational function, but a physical processes that has said functional capacities.
Then may I ask how you know that this is the case, and not the reverse ?
In the same way that I know a car is not a kind of driving but a device that performs the function of driving, that light is not information transference but an entity that can be used to transfer information, or that photosynthesis is not energy collection but a process which functions to collect energy. Physical phenomena are not functions but processes that can carry out functions; in the same token, computation is not a physical phenomenon but a function carried out by physical phenomena.
By "subject" I mean a being that has subjective experiences -- i.e. they are conscious.
Ok. The problem is, this sounds fairly circular. How do you know if something has subjective experiences ? How do you know that a pocket calculator doesn't have a modicrum of experience ?
Just as I don't know if all things
"have a modicrum of experience" and that panpsychism is true. However, being as how I know that I am not always conscious, even while my brain/body continue to process information, I think its safe to assume that subjective experience is not a universal property of all systems or even computational artifiacts.
It makes no sense to speak of something being "as real as" X or "as real as" Y because there aren't degrees of reality. Something is either real or it is not.
But that's the point. "Running" exists in the same way that "legs" exist. But both aren't the same. Why would you think that consciousness is a thing more like "legs" than like "running" ?
I'd say that consciousness is something like "legs"
[LOL!
] and experiences are akin to "running"
When I use the term "subjective" I'm not merely referring to matters of opinion and interpretation but -all- conscious experiences -- including the repeatable observations made by scientists in controlled conditions. Empirical observations -are- subjective experiences.
Only from a solipsist point of view.
Oy...Thats not solipsism,
Belz. Solipsism is the view that only the solipsist is real and that all observed and observable phenomena
[including other people] are just figments of the solipsist's fantastical dream.
I'm not saying that observed objects are figments of imagination, I'm saying that observations are subjective experiences produced by stimuli. When scientists observe an empirical result the object of their observation is very real, but they are aware of it's reality via their subjective experiences of it. Do you understand what I'm saying?
All subjective experiences, including emotions, are by definition, what a subject is aware of at any given time. To claim that a person does not know what they're feeling is like saying they're not aware of what they're aware of. Its an oxymoron.
Not at all. As I said bove, people are routinely wrong about what they perceive.
Unless an person is lying they cannot be wrong about what they perceive, they can only misinterpret their perceptions. For instance, if a small child is shown a hologram of a pink elephant they may believe that what they're seeing is a real elephant when that they're really perceiving is the illusion of an elephant. However, their perception of the illusion is very real.
Back to your earlier example, a person can feel the sensation of hunger even tho their body is not really in need of food ATM. However, it is still an objective fact that the person
feels hungry.
So how did you get from that statement that a proton moving at relativistic speeds is not moving?
Sigh. If an atom's movement is just about uncertainty, then an atom covering 300,000 km in a second isn't really moving.
That implies that distances don't really exist. Those are your words, not mine.
Those aren't my words; thats your confused misinterpretation of what was actually said. I said that the movement of particles is the
uncertainty of their position. We know from the findings of QM that position/momentum are conjugate variables of particles. In this case, that means that the more certainty there is about one variable
[say, position] the more uncertain the value of the other
[momentum], and
vis versa. That does NOT imply that there aren't spacial distances or that particles do not move. If you're going to argue against a point I'm making could you atleast make sure you understand whats actually being said first? -_-"