Peter Holmes wrote: ↑February 18th, 2020, 9:52 am
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?
Because "experience" is ambiguous. It can refer to something objective ("I have 10 years experience as a journeyman plumber"), or to a subjective, inner sensation or event. Hence the adjective (fairly standard in the philosophy of mind).
Why invent 'a hypothetical, immaterial 'organ'? What use is this 'descriptive construct'?
Because it provides a unity and locus for conscious phenomena; a conceptual/descriptive framework for discussing those phenomena. "Minds" are immaterial analogs of bodies, allowing description using similar syntactic structures. It is term of linguistic convenience.
And is experience anything other than subjective? What might objective experience be?
Answered above. But there are many other examples: "Skydiving: the experience of a lifetime!," ""Everyone I know has had bad experiences with that company." Etc.
And what about the unconscious processing of experience? Does the mind do that too?
Yep. The "subconscious mind" (a somewhat paradoxical term, but analogous to non-conscious bodily processes).
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?
It denotes any of the distinct sensations, impressions, feelings, thoughts, beliefs, etc., that someone may be experiencing. But it doesn't
describe them very well. E.g., no description will tell Mary what "red" will look like when she encounters it for the first time.
(Here is a link to Frank Jackson's famous paper):
https://watermark.silverchair.com/pq32- ... nHeWMQ0AWE
And what are the 'subjective aspects' of 'subjective experience' (?) that can't, even in principle, be described?
What can't be described are any phenomena denoted with "qualia" terms --- terms for colors, odors, tastes, tactile sensations, or terms for feelings or emotional states. They can't be described in a way that will allow someone who has never experienced them to visualize them or recognize them on presentation. I can describe, say, a certain house on a certain street in such a way that you can visualize it and recognize it when you see it. But I can't describe to Mary what red will look like, what cinnamon will smell like, or what feeling sad will feel like. Such description is impossible because those properties are
perceptual primitives. All description consists in attaching predicates (properties) to subjects (objects). But those primitives have no properties; they are unitary, simple, and unique. They
are properties. The terms for them are the terms from which all description begins.
Not only does talk of the mind and mental things and events have no descriptive utility . . .
Really? You're prepared to abandon such constructions as, "My mind's made up," "He's out of his mind," "She suffered a mental breakdown," etc.?
- 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.
Well, I agree there. So its up to us philosophers to slay those metaphysical hobgoblins whenever they sneak into the conversation.
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.
As above, we can denote them, but not describe them in an informative way. Sure, we can speak of, say, "bright red" or "dark red." That tells the hearer that the patch of color referred to emits or reflects more or less light. But it tells him nothing about what "red" is. Or we can speak of mild pains or severe pains. That tells the hearer that pains have variable intensities. But it tells him nothing about what pain feels like.
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.
Of course I do. I experience those "mental" phenomena directly. As Descartes pointed out, I cannot deny that I am thinking, and there is something doing that thinking. Even if some (or all) of my thoughts are illusions, I can't deny that I'm having them. But I can't experience your thoughts or illusions directly. I can know of them only by inference (a compelling and useful inference, but still an inference).