stevevw
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- Nov 4, 2013
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But photons, rods and cone cells don't themselves produce or explain the qualitative experience of color. You attempted to explain the experience of color through how subjects can experience different colors. But that can only be evidenced by asking the subject and not by testing the physical mechanism's. So there's an explanatory gap between the physical mechanism and the experience of color that empirical science cannot overcome.As I've said, the experience we have is a result of brain cells interacting in response to photons stimulating the rod and cone cells in our eyes. Photons are real, the cells in the eyes are real, the brains cells are real.
Yes and I address your reply. There is something real that we are experiencing about the physical objective world. But that perceived realness may be a reflection of something more fundamental. For example you may see a computer screen in front of you and can touch it. But according to QM the computer screen is 99.9999% empty space and energy.So? This doesn't mean there isn't something in reality that we are experiencing. And I've already address the idea that it's all in our heads, back in post 265.
So if that's the case what is giving the chair its perceived realness. It may be how humans comprehend the world for practical reasons. But in reality objects are basically empty space. Maybe we create the physical reality we perceive. There may be a whole lot going on out there that we don't know which influences how we see things.
Yes and none of that explains why we experience colors like red. A person can know everything there is to know about the mechanisms for photons, eyes and brains but still not know what it is like to experience the color red. Such as a color blind person. But if they happen to regain their color and experienced the color red for the first time they have come to know something new about reality such as the experience of red. They can then know what will produce a red experience.The photon that enters your eye doesn't depend on your experience in order to exist. It has a certain wavelength that doesn't depend on your experience of it.
I haven't studied color inversion enough to know what specific color's are inverted. But I would imagine if its switching colors to their opposite on the color spectrum then even someone with color inversion will see contrasting colors because each will go to their opposite where light becomes dark and dark becomes light. They wouldn't both become dark or light.Then we'd be seeing people who would look at a wasp and think it does not have the high contrast colors.
The experience of having those perceptions is different to the perceptions themselves. The problem is the idea of perception can mean different things I think. In a sense you could say they happen at the same time as it happens so quick. Some say consciousness is an epiphenomena so that would make it something our perception creates. Then there are subconscious perceptions like blind sight that we are not even aware of.If you don't think "consciousness" and "perception" are the same thing, why did you say, "Consciousness doesn't effect our perceptions, consciousness is the experience of 'what it is like' to have those perceptions." You literally said that conscious is having perceptions, so you can't now say that they are two different things.
of course it tells us things about the world. Our experience throughout history has revealed many insights into reality. In fact its the only thing that is real. As I mentioned there are experiments done in QM which point to interpretations making consciousness fundamental.As of yet, this idea can tell us nothing verifiable about the world and can't be tested in any way whatsoever. So it's nothing more than wishful thinking.
But the thing we are perceiving is not really external because its all in our own minds. What we perceive in that simulation as objective reality is actually programmed into us to think its objective reality when its not. The reality outside the simulation represents the deeper reality we can never know in any material way because we can never get outside the simulation to test it.In which case the simulation is the thing external to ourselves that we are perceiving. That would fit perfectly with what I have been saying.
But I think there is justification for this idea. I've linked articles about how consciousness, Mind and information or knowledge seems fundamental to reality. So its not completely out of the question and in some ways seems to fit what we are finding in QM.But we have no way to test this interpretation, so it remains just an interpretation.
I'm not going to tell you that you can't believe it's correct if you want. But there's no justification for you to hold it as any more correct than my position.
I am not saying there really wasn't something that went bang. I am saying that the bang noise is one aspect of understanding what's going on. That's a mechanical and reductive way of seeing the world. Everything thing has a physical cause. The bang can be explained in physical terms, sound waves, balloon being popped etc.. But the other aspect of what's going on is how we experience noise.But then there must be something external to ourselves which is providing said experience, otherwise why would we both get that experience at the same time?
From that experience we map out the world. That helps us tell a balloon pop from a gun shot, well most of the time. But that's the reality we create through our experience which is part of overall reality because any theory of reality has to include conscious experience. Scientific materialism removes consciousness as a causal influence by making it an epiphenomena.
May be either way its real enough to mean something as far as reality is concerned. But I don't think you can reduce consciousness to evolutionary processes. That just creates a bunch more Hard problems.Why do we experience things? Because there are things which can harm us and so the ability to experience them so we can protect ourselves will be evolutionarily advantageous.
If consciousness was evolutionary then when did a hominid become conscious. One would think evolutionary even simple life has that tendency to protect themselves as a survival instinct. Simple eyes that can detect light becomes a survival advantage to avoid threats as an advantage. This would imply all life is conscious to some degree.
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