AkuManiMani
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2008
- Messages
- 3,089
Let me ask you: If those same delusional people were conducting scientific research would you consider their work reliable?
The only way to remove said bias is by averaging it with observation from several independent sources. I.e. science.
I didn't ask you that. I asked you if science conducted by delusional people is reliable.
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.
That wasn't your question. You asked an example of people being wrong abuot their experiences.
Lets go back to what was actually said:
AkuManiMani said:Are you suggesting that people routinely mistake one sensation for another?
It happens.
Sounds like a fairly serious condition. I've never had such a problem. Could you possibly cite some examples?
I asked you to give me an example of a person mistaking one sensation for another. You having the munchies after a workout doesn't cut it.
Being conscious is, for the conscious subject, proof positive that they are conscious regardless of whether or not they can report it to others.
Uh-huh. But that's irrelevant, because no matter how convinced YOU are about you being conscious, it doesn't mean I get to believe you. You need something everyone can verify.
Which is why I'm emphasizing that we must learn what physically constitutes consciousness so that discerning it in others is a matter of scientific rigor and not intuitive guessing.
In the same way that I know a car is not a kind of driving but a device that performs the function of driving
Except you already know that a car is a thing. Since no one here has ever been able to define consciousness as anything but a function, it's a little surprising to read you say you "know" that consciousness is a thing like a car or like legs.
My sensations are physical things produced by physical stimuli. My thoughts are physical things that have physical effects on my physical actions. My emotions are physical things that have physical effects on my physical body. All of these physical sensations, thoughts, and emotions make up my consciousness; ergo consciousness is a physical thing.
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.
No one says it is. But how would you go about determining what's conscious and what isn't ? You mentionned self-reporting, but we already know it isn't a reliable source.
Via introspection each conscious subject tacitly knows that they are conscious and what they are aware of. Thus, the conscious subject is able to communicate their conscious status to others. However, as we've both pointed out, while self-reporting is a possible indicator than another entity is conscious it is not proof positive. What we need is a the knowledge of what physically constitutes consciousness. Using this knowledge we can discern if a given system is conscious regardless of their ability to self-report. Depending out how advanced our scientific development goes in such an area, it may even become possible to discern what a subject is experiencing at a given time.
I'd say that consciousness is something like "legs" [LOL!] and experiences are akin to "running"
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Unless experiences and consciousness are one and the same.
Interestingly enough, I've already argued that experiences are "made of" consciousness
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.
Solipsism denies the possibility of knowledge by saying that nothing is certain, except the experience itself.
It doesn't deny the possibility of knowledge. Solipsism just assumes that all that exists is the mind of the experiencer.
Your statement 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.", that's irrelevant, because the whole point of science is to negate bias resulting from this obvious fact.
Science is the systematic acquisition of empirical knowledge and the field of science involves multiple individuals systematically pooling their knowledge into a collective framework. Even so, its a FACT that every empirical observation is a subjective experience produced by one's senses. Whether you want to make the leap to conclude that this fact necessarily implies solipsism [hint: it doesn't] is your own affair.
[ETA: Keep in mind tho, that any argument for or against solipsism can only be made on philosophical grounds -- something you've expressed an aversion to in the past.]
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