GE Morton wrote: ↑February 17th, 2020, 11:08 pm
Peter Holmes wrote: ↑February 17th, 2020, 4:12 pm
QED: 'metaphysical/ontological fictions'. Any equivocation on 'in' here? Are minds in brains in the way that brains are in skulls?
The "mind" is conventional term for denoting the subjective experience of a sentient creature, and the conscious processing of that experience. It is a descriptive construct --- a hypothetical, immaterial "organ" wherein that processing occurs. It only becomes a fiction when it is accorded an ontological status other than a descriptive construct. Some of that experience could be described in physiological terms, but most of it (so far) cannot, and the subjective aspects of it cannot be described in principle; they can be known only by acquaintance.
The conceptual tangle in this explanation demonstrates my point. You say 'the mind' is a name for (a term denoting) 'the subjective experience of a sentient creature, and the conscious processing of that experience'. Why not just talk about the experience? Why invent 'a hypothetical, immaterial 'organ'? What use is this 'descriptive construct'?
And is experience anything other than subjective? What might objective experience be? And what about the unconscious processing of experience? Does the mind do that too? And, given our denial of substance-dualism, we agree there are only electro-chemical processes going on in our brains. So what is it that mental talk describes? And what are the 'subjective aspects' of 'subjective experience' (?) that can't, even in principle, be described? Why are they different from the other aspects (?) of subjective experience that this supposedly useful descriptive construct can describe?
And so on. I'm not trying to be difficult - but this is a mess.
The reason why they are thorny and unsettled questions in the philosophy of mind is precisely the one I stated: minds and mental things and events are misleading metaphysical fictions.
Well, the task for the philosophy of mind is purge that vocabulary of its metaphysical baggage without abandoning its descriptive utility.
Not only does talk of the mind and mental things and events have no descriptive utility - it suckers us into the metaphysical delusions that have plagued philosophy - and not just philosophy of mind - for centuries. But, of course, we happily use such talk every day utterly unaware of the philosophical mess that taking such talk seriously causes.
How do we learn the meanings of the words we use to talk about our thoughts, feelings and sensations?
In the conventional way --- by observing how others use them. But no possible verbal description can convey the subjective quality of a feeling or percept (think of Jackson's "Mary the color scientist" scenario). That quality is ineffable, but is quite real.
Delete the redundant 'subjective', and we're left with 'the quality of a feeling or percept', which you say is 'ineffable'. Then how is it possible for us to describe any thoughts, feelings or sensations? Is your 'descriptive construct' completely useless? In what way is 'the quality of a feeling' different from a feeling? More furkling down the rabbit hole.
So you also can't be absolutely sure you have a mind either.
Of course I can. I understand what the word denotes --- subjective experience, etc. --- and know I have those; I experience them directly. But that you have them can only be an inference I draw from your behavior (similarly with some other animals).
I'm sorry, but if you can't be sure other people have minds, but may be zombies or computer-generated constructs, then you have no reason to be sure what you're experiencing isn't also an illusion - that your 'mind' is real. After all, you think it's merely a descriptive construct.