Maybe-Mathematical Musings — nostalgebraist: perversesheaf replied to your...

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
nostalgebraist
nostalgebraist

perversesheaf replied to your post:You know, I took the “hard problem of conscious”…

What are the right terms?

Basically what I said in my last post.  In addition to “consciousness is explicable in material terms” and “consciousness is explicable in non-material terms,” we need “consciousness is not explicable, because our sense that something ‘has not been explained’ is impossible to satisfy, even in principle.”

This isn’t the same thing as Colin McGinn’s “humans aren’t smart enough to explain consciousness” deal.  It’s not that we can’t fathom the explanation; it’s that there isn’t one.  That we feel a desire or need does not imply that there is any conceivable thing which could satisfy it; it is possible to have an unsatisfiable desire.

I think a lot of confusion arises because people who think this way (I’ve met some others, and I suspect there are a lot more) tend to call themselves “physicalists” in practice if pressed, simply because they don’t think it’s sensible to introduce anything besides physical reality to answer the feeling of lack (which cannot be answered at all).  These people may insist that physical brain states are all there is, but they don’t mean that it’s obvious to them that physical brain states would produce qualia – rather, they think it will never be obvious that any given thing will produce qualia, so they’ve stopped expecting that kind of satisfaction.

It’s akin to being a “physicalist” on the “why is there something rather than nothing?” question (for more on this analogy, see the previous post).  I don’t think physics explains why there is something rather than nothing, I just think that introducing extra, “non-physical” stuff is clearly not the right approach to that lack of explanation.  The universe is (stuff explicable by physics) + (stuff that can never feel like it has been explained, even in principle).  Calling the latter “non-physical,” as though it were in the same category as ghosts and souls, is a category error.  Better to call it “stuff that inescapably weirds out the human brain.”