TeapotCavalry
Master Poster
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Remember that I asked about where is your experience located, the "sensation of being you". Well, let's think about this for a moment, every time you "feel yourself" you are contained in an specific place... and that place is linked to your senses. There are multiple experiments in which (this was accurately pointed out by someone in the thread) your senses are cheated by using videocameras for example, and the "sense of you" is drastically altered.
Let's take this a step further. Let's say we have the technology to extract your brain from your body, and that we can put it in a machine and link this machine with your body through your senses... In this way, your seeing, proprioception, your hearing, everything, would be transmitted from your body to your brain. Let's say that you are not aware of this operation and so, when we wake you up you feel exactly normal, so, we give you a ticket and you take a train...
Let's go back to the original question: if I wanted to point at you... where should I point to?
Well, first of all, "if I wanted to point at you" is restricting the options (false dilemma? moving the goalposts?), and this additional information (or lack of it - I mean you being duped into thinking you still have your brain inside your head) changes the scenario. The common answer has been "behind your eyes", because we have knowledge that that's where the brain lives and it's responsible for generating those experiences. That answer has nothing to do with senses, hence you cannot point anywhere regarding the cyborg you have riding that train, regardless of he himself being unaware of his predicament.
Furthermore, I think asking "where is the experience located" is practically meaningless, or at the very least misleadingly ambiguous question. The experience of you being in certain space-time point happens in the brain, and comprises of the sense data you gather through your senses. If your senses happen to gather data from place Y (the train), instead of place X (where your brain is), your experience of your space-time location is built upon the place Y. All it demonstrates is that perception relies on senses, and you can fool your perception (and also it opens up the all wonderful possibilities of simulations in gaming world). The experience still happens in your brain. Perhaps we are conflating the source of the experience with the actual/end-product experience. Much like flour, eggs and sugar is not an experience of a pie, but put them together in the oven - that's where the experience happens (NB my pastry know-how is sub-standard regarding ingredients).
And finally, I don't think not one of us here advocates or believes in naive realism. Although naive realism might be consistent with the answers given here, the responses are nowhere sufficiently inclusive to infer a naive realism worldview. They are mainly driven by scientific knowledge, not by a philosophical ideology, and it would be wrong to pigeonhole them into a category that encompasses a vast baggage of other, unstated viewpoints.
My 2¢