SteveKlinko wrote: ↑December 3rd, 2021, 12:38 pm
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑December 3rd, 2021, 12:15 pm
Don't get too hung up on the exact words used. In this topic/context, Consciousness and Conscious Experience are one and the same.
But that is not true by virtue of all these theories that say they Explain Consciousness, but have nothing to say about Conscious Experience. Think about the theories that claim to Mathematically measure how much Consciousness is here or there based on some complexity or computation criteria. They literally claim that they are Measuring Consciousness but when pressed to say how they are Measuring or Explaining an actual Conscious Experience like Redness, there is only Silence. They are not Viewing Consciousness as Conscious Experience. I don't think they even know what they are Measuring when they say they are Measuring Consciousness. This is why we must always specify Conscious Experience and not just some generic Consciousness concept that nobody understands. I know what the Experience of Redness is. Let's specifically Explain that to start with, and then we can generalize after that.
Unfortunately, the phrase "conscious experience" is itself ambiguous:
In the first-order sense, the adjective "conscious" is redundant, with "nonconscious experience" being a contradiction in terms;
and in the higher-order sense, a conscious experience is one
of which its subject is conscious (aware).
Given the higher-order interpretation, "nonconscious experience" is not a contradiction in terms, because subjects may be able to have experiences of which they are not conscious.
However,
according to higher-order theories of first-order (phenomenal) consciousness, consciousness (awareness)
of it is necessary for it, such that no mental occurrence is an experience unless its subject is conscious (aware)
of it (by virtue of inner attention, introspection, or reflection).