That they exist is not such a given considering that the people studying behaviour and the human nervous system don't seem to be using the term at all.
So what if they aren't using the term? Its just a label for a class of phenomena. Just because some don't choose to use the term doesn't mean that the process it refers to isn't real.
AkuManiMani said:
You seem to be unable to distinguish the sensation of cold from the actual state of being cold. They most certainly are not the same.
How would you know ?
Because its possible not to feel temperature.
AkuManiMani said:
Words are still composed of phonemes; they do not lose their status of being phonemes when they compose words or propositions. What you are saying is equivalent to claiming that rivers flow downstream but water does not.
Wow. That has nothing to do with it. You said that you can have qualia about qualia and you're using text as a metaphor. But clearly, you can't have phonemes about phonemes so the metaphor doesn't really work, at any level.
By merely
talking about phonemes you're creating phonemes in reference to phonemes. You've hit a dead end on this one, try another route.
AkuManiMani said:
How can a concept make sense from any point of view if it is incoherent?
Because philosophy often doesn't care.
I wasn't aware that philosophy was a person.
AkuManiMani said:
The concept of 'genes' had the same epistemic status until Watson & Crick helped discover the structure of the DNA molecule and crack the genetic code. The fact that a concept or phenomena has not yet been scientifically mapped does not make the concept 'incoherent', it just means that we have no working knowledge of it.
Nice try. Indeed, that it isn't understood doesn't mean it's incoherent. That's not why I'm calling qualia incoherent, though.
You're simply quibbling over the term. You can't prove the the concept is 'incoherent' because the term is in reference to a class of vertical phenomena.
AkuManiMani said:
That is utter nonsense, and you should know better. A frozen corpse doesn't feel cold it simply is cold. In order for something to experience stimuli as something there must be a quite a number of intermediate steps. If there were no need of those steps then there would be no need for brains or neural processing because objects would just directly experience stimuli w/o.
The only intermediate step is that it has to strike a nerve, so to speak, in order for "you" to detect the coldness.
You claimed that there are no intermediate steps and equated the temperature as being
identical to the sensation of it being cold. However you want to phrase it, the statement was dead wrong.
AkuManiMani said:
You're completely missing the point. Even the components of atoms are themselves just behaviors, and their components, and so on. There is no such thing as objects outside of process.
Considering what I just said, I find it odd that you answer this, so I'm just going to say it again.
Aku. Observable entities are objects that have behaviours. Now, it's possible that elementary particles are, in and of themselves, behaviours but that's besides the point. Things composed of particles are objects, not behaviours. A thought, like "running", is an action and is not composed of anything. Yet it still exists. I think you're trying to describe the composition of a behaviour.
[...]
Gosh, you're really having problems with this. If everything is behaviour, then it's useless to ever talk about composition. And if not, then qualia wouldn't be basic unless we're talking about new physical laws, and so far you haven't demonstrated that this is necessary.
*facepalm*
I thought you would be able to intuitively pick up on the concept but it seems I'm going to have to break it down to you piecemeal. All entities are processes and their
objecthood is a measure of the degree of their overall habituation. An entity's particular
pattern(s) of habituation determine its properties as an object. It is pattern of habituation thru time/space that allows entities to be distinguished from the background of their surroundings and labeled, as such. Process and object are fundamentally equivalent.
This is all just a fancy metaphysical way of restating the equivalence of matter and energy. Energy is change [or potential change] and objects are habituated patterns of energy. Matter is just a class of objects composed of atoms. Thoughts and ideas are another class of objects which just happen to
not be composed of atoms.
AkuManiMani said:
But pointing out the irrational basis of your objections is fun
Irrational ? NO ONE HERE is able to define qualia in a way that could make them falsifiable or observable even in principle, and I'M the one who's irrational ?
'Qualia' is just a label -- a term -- for the sense datum that make up our conscious observations. Pray tell, how do you
falsify observation? The fact is, you're going thru the ridiculous effort to falsify the concept on the grounds that it cannot be observed when the concept is in reference TO observation. You're just mindlessly attacking on the basis of fluff [in this case, a choice of labels] and confusing it with a dispute of substance. Get off it,
Belz, this is becoming embarrassing. -_-
AkuManiMani said:
Translation:
"I really don't like that word qualia; it makes me wet the bed at night. Can we just call them perceptions?"
Childish.
Maybe, but its still true
AkuManiMani said:
Because I don't bend over backwards to avoid using taboo words lol
Oh, like "soul" ? Why don't we use that, instead ?
Because that isn't the concept being discussed, obviously
