Ghatanothoa wrote:As long as people can agree what red is who gives a fuck what it looks like in someone elses head

Ghatanothoa wrote:As long as people can agree what red is who gives a fuck what it looks like in someone elses head
I would argue against the "totally". Sure, we have no direct experience of the inner mental states of others, but we have evolved have a "theory of mind" which allows us to create pragmatically useful models of other's cognitive states, particularly when we use our own consciousness as a basis for comparison.Rum wrote:No, you misunderstand the OP. The view you seem to detest so much is called 'solipsism'. ( see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solipsism)The Mad Hatter wrote:Because you're believing the universe is the result of your observation when the reverse is the reality.
There is no evidence either way on this one. 'Common sense' however dictates that your mind is one of the billions that exist on the planet today. My OP was not about solipsism, but about the fact that each of those minds is totally isolated except for the narrow pathways of communication which we have between ourselves, all prone to misunderstanding, ambiguity and in any case lacking in content for the most part.
We invent the content of the universe and we project it too in my view,
A perfect example of solipsism.We invent the content of the universe and we project it too in my view
and beer
stripes4 wrote:I just like eating crisps. Does that help?
You might like eating crisps. Or you might just think you do. Or you could be lying to us all about your crisps predelictions. How could we ever know?stripes4 wrote:I just like eating crisps. Does that help?
I think not. You have no access to the way the other persons perceptions interpret the mechanism which triggers the sensation of 'taste'. You could guess, but you will never know.The Mad Hatter wrote:No. We know that crisps would taste the same, or similarly to, anyone with a healthy functioning taste... err... system... (oh shut up) because it would operate similarly at a biological level. The only way it would taste different, all conditions being the same, is if somehow magic determined the taste of food.
You could do a series of controlled tests which could at least establish that people can detect certain foods by taste alone, and consistently give them the same labels (and I would confidently expect that result...)Rum wrote:I think not. You have no access to the way the other persons perceptions interpret the mechanism which triggers the sensation of 'taste'. You could guess, but you will never know.The Mad Hatter wrote:No. We know that crisps would taste the same, or similarly to, anyone with a healthy functioning taste... err... system... (oh shut up) because it would operate similarly at a biological level. The only way it would taste different, all conditions being the same, is if somehow magic determined the taste of food.
The only missing ingredient to complete this melange of bullshit is the mention of quantum mechanics. Where is Undercoverelephant? He would add it in a trice.The Mad Hatter wrote:I utterly loathe that whole philosophy. It reeks of woo and metaphysics, with remnants of that human-centric perspective, as if somehow the Univere's shape is contingent upon Man's recognition of it.
The physical reality of the brain, the way tiny charges jump across synapses, is the person. Mention of "inner experience" puts me on infinite regress alert. There is no little agent sitting inside the eyeball, evaluating the sensual data that stream in. Those data make the person. If you doubt that, see if you can evince some opinions or emotions from a baby as it leaves the womb, and report your findings.hiyymer wrote:But you wouldn't know them as a person. You'd only know the physical reality of their brain. There is no person there. Person is what we experience on the inside.
More than that. In fact, you couldn't really call them islands, but city blocks. Mildly different, but to all extents and purposes the same from an outside perspective. As I have said before, when all conditions being sufficiently equal, the taste would be sufficiently similar unless you can introduce an outside party which somehow arbiters taste, and that outside party is 'uniform' in nature (ie, the same force reacting in the same way with each individual) but producing variable results.JimC wrote:You could do a series of controlled tests which could at least establish that people can detect certain foods by taste alone, and consistently give them the same labels (and I would confidently expect that result...)Rum wrote:I think not. You have no access to the way the other persons perceptions interpret the mechanism which triggers the sensation of 'taste'. You could guess, but you will never know.The Mad Hatter wrote:No. We know that crisps would taste the same, or similarly to, anyone with a healthy functioning taste... err... system... (oh shut up) because it would operate similarly at a biological level. The only way it would taste different, all conditions being the same, is if somehow magic determined the taste of food.
Given such a result, there is a certain commonalty in peoples tastes. True, at a purely experiential level we cannot make a perfect one-to-one link between my experience of eating crisps, and yours. However, we can both identify them in blind tasting, and give them a common label, so our island consciousnesses at least have plenty of bridges...
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