ruby sparks
Contributor
Here is Dennett's 1988 argument for eliminating qualia:
http://cogprints.org/254/1/quinqual.htm
I have read it and at a guess I'd say I probably grasp no more than about 50% of it.
At this point, I'd say I was unconvinced. Whatever the shortfalls of and problems with qualia, it seems impossible to deny that 'something is being experienced' and that therefore qualia survive, even if they are not what I tend to think they might be.
I note that it has been said of Dennett that his case amounts to saying that "careful examination of our intuitive notion of qualia reveals that it is a confused notion, that it is advisable to accept that experience does not have the properties designated by it and that it is best to eliminate it".
Is something not having the properties designated to it enough reason to eliminate it?
Here, for comparison, is a 1997 critical response (to Dennett's 1988 argument) which I have not read yet but intend to:
http://cogprints.org/368/3/LUCS58.pdf
http://cogprints.org/254/1/quinqual.htm
I have read it and at a guess I'd say I probably grasp no more than about 50% of it.
At this point, I'd say I was unconvinced. Whatever the shortfalls of and problems with qualia, it seems impossible to deny that 'something is being experienced' and that therefore qualia survive, even if they are not what I tend to think they might be.
I note that it has been said of Dennett that his case amounts to saying that "careful examination of our intuitive notion of qualia reveals that it is a confused notion, that it is advisable to accept that experience does not have the properties designated by it and that it is best to eliminate it".
Is something not having the properties designated to it enough reason to eliminate it?
Here, for comparison, is a 1997 critical response (to Dennett's 1988 argument) which I have not read yet but intend to:
http://cogprints.org/368/3/LUCS58.pdf
Last edited:
