AkuManiMani said:
Actually, chickens are composed of star byproducts.
Great! So now we can have stars about stars!!!
That's just silly
Stars aren't in semiotic reference to chickens, and
vis versa. Things like perceptions and language are referential.
AkuManiMani said:
Also, aether and phlogiston were themselves just labels.
Well, that way we can safely say that everything is a label. No. Aether was a
model.
Mm...Not to nitpick, but aether was the assumed media thru which light propagated and many scientist and thinkers of the time proposed models for it. A lot of the models' predictions about the nature of the media turned out to be incorrect, but the basic premise was right. We now understand that light propagates in waves thru the media we now, call space-time and that media itself warps and bends. Reality turned out to be a lot weirder than scientists at the time ever anticipated *_*
AkuManiMani said:
Ah, perceptions are necessarily qualitative.
That's what I thought. So why call them "qualitative perceptions" ? Isn't that redundant ?
Yea, it is pretty redundant, but I was just trying to drive home that I was equating the two. I suppose there were better ways to do it but hey *shrug* atleast now we're clear on that part.
Define "quality". If you happen to define it in the same way as the word "property", then there is no distinction between quantitative and qualitative.
Okay, now we're starting to get somewhere. I've been thinking over this, and related topics, for a while and I've come to a bit of an odd conclusion, so bear with me.
The two concepts are linked but not exactly the same. Remember earlier when I was harping on about how qualities and quantities were a
complementary relation? They are a basic relational aspect of reality; while they are co-substantial they can be distinguished in some sense. I'll try to illustrate what I mean by way of example: inside/outside, up/down, wave/particle, yes/no, etc. In a transcendent sense, each of the polarities mentioned are one and the same and yet, they are necessarily distinguished with values that dependent upon frame of reference.
Every object/process, by simply existing, is an expression of some quantity. But, in the context of some conscious entity, the quantities take on qualities. The
nature of those qualities [the elements of
'seems as' that some have been calling qualia] vary with the subjective make-up of the observer. Now, the question is, what is it about some entities that 'causes them to
perceive -- to be conscious
of -- the information around them?
The simple answer that its 'just information processing' tells us nothing;
all physical objects and events are information processes. There has to be some more specific physical criteria for what gives rise to the phenomena we call perception [or consciousness, lucidity -- w/e]. I'm willing to bet that, eventually, the doctrine of S-AI is going to go the way of the aether and phlogiston or be subsumed by a much more useful model.
Even if I were to accept that, indeed, there is a distinction between quantitative and qualitative, and that we perceive in one way what is objectively another way, it still wouldn't follow that you can decompose qualities into qualia. What qualia composes "cold", exactly ?
A lot of contemporary physics has involved breaking down nature into discrete units called 'quanta'. Some examples would be photons, electron/positron, and even quanta of sound called phonons. If every even, object, and process can be reduced down to discrete quanta it stands to reason that perceptions can likewise be broken down into more basic elements. These elements are what some have referred to as qualia. Contrary to what some philosophers seem to believe, I do no think that qualia are somehow in contradiction to 'materialist' ontology.
If we are to ever understand consciousness -- what it REALLY is -- there has to me a model of physics that pinpoints
exactly what it is. I'd love to one day wake up to a world where a trained scientist or professor can, with confidence, tell his students what physically constitutes the feeling we call 'cold', or any other subjective sense impression. When we
really understand consciousness, there will be engineers and technicians that can use that understanding to reproduce specific sensations and feelings in a precise and controlled manner.
I'm not saying 'qualia' [i.e. elements of perception] are supernatural or out of the realm of science. Far from it. I'm saying that they can be scientifically understood and that such 'private behaviors' are observable and reproducible.
AkuManiMani said:
BTW, if you think that philosophy is 'drivel' then why are you participating in the R&P forum?
You mean, like "why" I argue on the topic of religion although I'm an atheist ?
Hate to break it to yah, but such arguments are, by definition, doing philosophy. If you think on such issues you're a philosopher by practice, if not by trade
AkuManiMani said:
Have you heard of a condition called synesthesia? Its a condition in which a subject experiences some sensory input as having another quality than is commonly attributed to it. For instance, in some people the condition may manifest as tastes being directly interpreted as color or light being interpreted as the sensation we normally associate with sound or motion.
All this demonstrates that the qualities our minds associate with a stimuli are incidental to the actual stimulus. The temperature of ice is just the relatively low thermal energy of it's constituent molecules. The sensation of it being 'cold' and the words we associate with the sensation are not identical the state of the object(s) producing the stimulus.
That's actually very interesting, but all it means is that some brains function inadequately and produce the wrong behavior for the correct stimuli.
Hm..
Lets say that there is a species of animal that perceived light as sensations similar to our perception of sound. Maybe another that perceives temperature the same way we sense taste. I would say that, as long as the sense impressions sufficiently correlated with the linked stimuli there's nothing wrong or dysfunctional about it. What I wanna know is what it is that causes us to perceive stimuli as the particular sensations we experience? What are the physical conditions required to bring about sensations? If one were to break sensations down to their basic components, what would they consist of? What kind of machine would be required to reproduce such sensations and how would we go about creating entirely new sensations?
There's just so much more to learn! *_*
AkuManiMani said:
You just did
Don't play games with me. I'm genuinely puzzled by your claim that you can have phonemes about phonemes, since phonemes don't represent anything and cannot be further broken down.
I'm saying that in the syntactic context of word configurations, and statements, phonemes take on referential meaning. If the syntactic structure points them in semantic reference to the concept of 'phoneme(s)' then they are in reference to 'phoneme(s)'. Heck, depending on the language, even a single phoneme may have a semantic meaning. I could invent a language right now where the phoneme
é, by itself, means
'phonemes'.
Science is a better version of philosophy, where we actually do stuff instead of just thinking about it. What I don't like about "philosphers" is that they think their musings amount to anything.
But what you're doing right now is philosophizing. You've just expounded your own personal philosophy and you're willing and able to argue for it. While you're not paid to do such things, or have a fancy title next to your name, if you formulate your own view of the world you're a philosopher
AkuManiMani said:
Isn't that a claim? I thought those couldn't get us anywhere... >_>
Again, you play games. I'm trying to have a discussion and you're laying silly word traps. Grow up.
Sorry. I can't resist sometimes, it's just so fun ^_^
When speaking of physical objects, it's usual to say they are composed of particles. Sure, the particles have a behavior. The behavior itself is not composed of particles, but of other behaviors. Sure enough, particles are composed of behaviors, but let's stick to the behaviors that never becomes particles, shall we ? "Running" is a good example. It's behavior, all the way down. Right ? So what's it made of ? Then apply that to qualia.
The whole enterprise of physics has been one big effort to find out what the world is 'made of'. Right now, some are proposing that its made up of vibrating, multidimensional bits of energy [aka, string/M-theory], others are proposing that its loops of space-time [aka, loop quantum gravity]. No matter how far we go down the reductive chain we just find more processes. Quite frankly, no one really know what the fundamental 'stuff' [noumena] of reality
is. The best we can do is just identify processes, determine their properties, and give them names.
Once you do, please explain to me precisely what those qualia are made of, to finally answer my question.
That's
exactly what I wanna find out. I want to know exactly what our perceptions are 'made of' in relation to all the other known processes. Perhaps their composition is of entities we already know of, perhaps they aren't. There is no living human who knows right now -- if they do they haven't claimed their Nobel yet. I think the answer to that question can be found out sooner if more thinkers stopped presuming that we already know.
Irrelevant. You have no evidence that I have qualitative experiences, specifically because those are NOT required for my behavior, and are undetectable even in principle.
If YOU are conscious then YOU detect them. Ergo, they are detectable, not only in principle, but
in practice. The fact that you can exhibit behaviors in absence of them shows that merely exhibiting behavior is not necessarily indicative of consciousness. The actual process of you having qualitative experiences is a vertical event distinct from any external behavior.
AkuManiMani said:
What I've been proposing is that there must be some objective means of determining whether or not an entity is conscious [i.e. has subjective experiences] w/o having to infer or guess
We've all been proposing this, in fact. But some of us have a more useful answer than fairies or "we can't know" or "we don't know yet".
No one here has proposed faeries or claimed that "we can't know'. The statement "we don't know
yet" is a flat fact. Saying consciousness is "just information processing" and leaving it at that is in no way useful -- EVERY process is an example of information processing. There is nothing "useful" about fabricating answer and then turning it into dogma. People deluding themselves in believing they have knowledge that they don't isn't science -- its
religion.
"Thickheaded" is not an observable behaviour.
Fundamentalism and dogmatism isn't observable?
Then how can you claim that a camera doesn't have qualia ? It DOES have observations.
Since when is light hitting a photosensitive surface 'observation'?

This is getting tiresome as you are clearly making stuff up. Yes, I do remember saying that. In fact I'll say it again: I prefer Mercutio's "private behaviour" as a description of the basic component of consciousness rather than qualia. It does NOT follow, however, that it's because I "don't like the word". It's the definition that I don't like. You can call them "Mandibles" if you like. The word doesn't bother me.
Bullship. You darn well that know that if I had been using the term [private behaviors] in place of [qualia] you wouldn't have spent to much time and effort trying to dispute what I've been saying. If I wanted to, I could have made exactly the same arguments using completely different terms and language and you'd have been nodding your head in agreement.
You clearly have no idea what an appeal to authority is. These people are experts IN THE FIELD WE ARE DISCUSSING. So they ARE an authority in these matters. Furthermore, I'm sure you prefer listening to your doctor about your apendicitis rather than a botanist.
How in the world can there be authorities on consciousness when there aren't any people who even KNOW what it is yet? No honest neuroscientist will tell you that they
know what consciousness is. All that
is known is that it's correlated with certain brain actives but there isn't the foggiest clue, even in theory, on how to synthetically reproduce it. Religious adherents of the S-AI ideology sure as hell have no idea what it is either -- tho the basic tenets of their faith require that they claim to.
Nobody here said we had a full understanding of it, though. But we do have a very good idea of the basic principles.
We have a rough idea of where to focus our search for the mechanism of consciousness -- no one at present know exactly what it is yet. There are plenty of hypothetical models and educated guesses but, at present, that's the state of the art.
AkuManiMani said:
Its a flat fact that there is nothing in current physical theory that predicts or accounts for conscious experience
That's funny, because quite a few people in this very thread have proposed convincing mechanics.
Care to repeat them? I must have missed it.
AkuManiMani said:
[even some in the fields who should know better]
Why do you assume that you know better than them ?
I'm just going off of the scientific knowledge that is readily available in any library, on the internet, and in schools. Those who claim to
know exactly what consciousness is have yet to provided any conclusive evidence of such knowledge. There are scientists who who claim working knowledge of what electricity is, and such knowledge is available for anyone to apply to produce consistent results. The same can be said of genetics, optics, or any other established science.
As of yet, no one hes yet demonstrated that they have a comprehensive theoretical model of what consciousness is and how to reproduce specific conscious states from scratch. All that is known is the rough knowledge that it is correlated with brain activity and that it can be affected by manipulating the CNS. Scientific understanding of consciousness is about as rough as that of genetics about a century ago.