davidsmith73 said:
But you have missed the all important distinction. "Gravity" is defined as a relational set of observations. And these observations manifest as experience. I agree that one cannot be shown gravity, only its effects. Now, qualia are not defined by a relational set of observations. Lets take redness. Which relational set of observations define redness ? None do. Redness is simply not reducable to such a definition.
Are you saying that someone could be perceiving redness and that we would not be able to tell using physical measurements, even in principle? I think this is incorrect.
Someone's perception of redness is
always correlated with specific brain activity, no? If we had the right technology (a super MRI machine that can monitor individual neurons, for example, which is in principle possible), we could always tell w/out error when someone was perceiving redness.
Yet this is apparently not satisfying to you. Of course, we don't yet have the technology to do this, but there are no conceptual barriers to this type of experiment.
So, yes, we can describe the correlation btwn redness and brain activity. But, no, as you say, we cannot "quantify" the qualia of redness itself, because that is defined to not be objectively measureable. Qualia is defined to be what
you perceive, not what is objectively measureable. Then you complain that we can't objectively measure qualia.
Sorry, I'm not sure what I meant by what I said myself. I meant to say this: because qualia are not quantifiable they are not recognised by science, as we know it today, as being the fundamental nature of reality. Science holds realtiy to be necessarily describable by mathematics. This may not be the case.
Then if you accept that science cannot investigate qualia, why do you complain that science cannot investigate qualia? Or are you contending that some day we will be able to quantify qualia? I'm just not sure where you are headed here.
I can conceive of a machine that would allow us to measure the impulses of each neuron and measure the chemical activity of the whole brain. I cannot even conceive of the possibility of a machine that would "measure qualia", because qualia are defined to be unmeasurable. It just becomes a word game.
How would you propose we do this, even in principle? ESP experiments? Fine, how would this help? What sort of experiment would help us investigate qualia? My point is that none are possible even in principle.
Within a mental monistic view, there would be no physical realm. The physical realm would really be a contruction of the mental realm. So when you measure something "objectively" you are not obtaining information about another realm outside of your experience. Rather this information exists within the single realm of qualia. Scientific observation and measurement would exist as part of the mental realm of qualia.
This is where I start to get confused and loose interest because, obviously, I do not hold a mental monistic view of the world. To me, this just sounds like the "It's a mystery" answer - a religious answer to what you pose as a philosophical/scientific question.
I'm just curious. Within this viewpoint (mental monistic), will the investigation of qualia be considered science, or will it be something else (meditation, prayer, or some such thing)? And, again, how will simply changing your viewpoint allow you to measure something that you say is unmeasurable scientifically?
There isn't a difference. Consciousness/qualia is reality. The physical world is a construction composed of qualia. I'm not sure in which context you ask the question.
Wait! You left out your original quote, and my question preceeding it:
I want to throw the ball back in your direction by asking a few questions, which may shed more light on your original question.
Do you hold Chalmers view that it's possible to have two identical physical systems/processes, one of which is conscious and one which is not?
If I was coming from the mental monist camp then no.
So here you say "no", they are not the same - meaning that there
is a physical difference between a conscious and non-conscious process. Now in your last post, you say there
is not a physical difference. Which is it?
If there is a physical difference, then we can measure it. If there is not, then it is undetectable even in principle.
Maybe what you are saying is that from a materialist perspective, they cannot be measured, but from a mental monistic perspective they
are measurable? Is this accurate?
If that's the case, then how should we proceed with the investigation of qualia? Are they only investagable from a religious perspective? Maybe that is your point? In your opinion, will qualia ever be able to be investigated scientifically?
I think the validity and repeatability of these experiments is a topic for another thread. I included them here to answer a question but suffice it to say, I disagree with you
Okay, we can agree to disagree. But it should not be a matter of opinion or belief whether ESP etc. are valid. If they are valid, you (someone) should be able to design an experiment that would convince "the rest of us". Until that day, ESP will be rightly dismissed by mainstream science. Right now, it seems that only people who believe in ESP believe in ESP, if you get my drift.
Or perhaps more importnatly, how "physical" is defined. Anyway, are you saying the definition of qualia is wrong ? Can you show how it is wrong ? Can you show me how qualia = physical process ?
So you must conclude that the materialistic notion that qualia = physical process is wrong.
I don't really understand the main point of your post. You seem to agree with me that qualia cannot be reduced to physical descriptions but then say that somehow the whole concept of what qualia are is wrong.
What I'm saying is that we can (or will be able to in the future) completely describe all of the brain activity that accompanies subjective perceptions. And what I'm further saying is that that will apparently not be enough for you, because the term "qualia" was invented specifically as a counter to materialism, w/out giving any possible way,
even in principle, to scientifically investigate the qualia themselves.
No one will ever be able to show that "qualia = physical process" because qualia is defined as the
subjective experience that accompanies certain physical processes. It specifically defined to not be the physical process itself. What we will be able to say definitively, IMHO, is that qualia will
always result from certain physical processes (just like gravitational attraction will always be present between two masses).
I am not saying that the definition of qualia is wrong. I'm saying that the concept of qualia is not scientifically useful.
No I don't (surprise
). I think its the most important and interesting discussion one can have about the nature of experience. If thats tedious for you then you can go play golf or something if you like.
Investigating how the brain works is the frontier of neuroscience. It is extremely important and very interesting to me. There are many questions to be answered.
At the end of the day, when we have a complete physical description of how the brain works, you will still be complaining that qualia have not been adequately addressed, and you will not provide any fruitful method of addressing your own question.
That is what I find tedious.