The map is not the territory. Just because descriptions of our brain states won’t help us figure out what subjective experiences are like (either currently or in the foreseeable future), doesn’t mean that those experiences aren’t a part of the physical world somehow. Reductionism has been a very successful paradigm in our description of the physical world, but we can’t state with any confidence that it has captured what the ontologically basic, “ground” level of physics is really like.
The map is not the territory. Just because descriptions of our brain states won’t help us figure out what subjective experiences are like (either currently or in the foreseeable future), doesn’t mean that those experiences aren’t a part of the physical world somehow
OK. I am not arguing for duaism. I am arguing against the claim tha adopting reductionism, or materialism, or m/b identity constitutes a resolution of any of any Hard Problem. What you are saying is that m/b identity might be true as unintelligible brute fact. What I am saying is that brute facts aren’t explanations.
The map is not the territory. Just because descriptions of our brain states won’t help us figure out what subjective experiences are like (either currently or in the foreseeable future), doesn’t mean that those experiences aren’t a part of the physical world somehow. Reductionism has been a very successful paradigm in our description of the physical world, but we can’t state with any confidence that it has captured what the ontologically basic, “ground” level of physics is really like.
OK. I am not arguing for duaism. I am arguing against the claim tha adopting reductionism, or materialism, or m/b identity constitutes a resolution of any of any Hard Problem. What you are saying is that m/b identity might be true as unintelligible brute fact. What I am saying is that brute facts aren’t explanations.