K
KyrieEleison17
Guest
Yes, qualia are the just ghosts or re-emergence of philosophical qualities coming back to haunt modern philosophy and science. Again, sophistic arguments might conceal and confuse them and give the impression that there’s no problem or basis for qualia, but with work and training a really good philosopher or scientist will see past this and know that there is a giant explanatory hole here. This hole was classically filled with God, as in Descartes’ case.I think you are thinking of “qualia” or the experience the observer has at observing color for instance that is more than just detecting wavelengths of light. This is probably related to an immaterial component of the observer. This might be an absurd example, but it may be the case that you and I have an “inverted spectrum” where we have agreed to call a certain color “red” but are actually perceiving different colors. If we swapped spectra, then each of us would have a novel experience viewing a strawberry for instance. Since the physical (name removed by moderator)uts are the same regardless (same wavelengths of light), then maybe that would be proof of an immaterial component of the human person? I have no idea if inverted spectra are real though as it seems a little bizarre. There are probably better examples but I am not too familiar with the philosophy behind qualia so I wouldn’t know what they are off the top of my head. Thank you for your (name removed by moderator)ut though.![]()
When considering colour as I did in my above example it is stunning to see the ghost of Descartes (Dualism) reappear with a vengeance even though, no doubt, the authors of the theories involved by no means were consciously or deliberately Cartesian - indeed, it is unlikely the theorists and researchers involved had ever actually seriously studied Descartes. But there he is. After all, Descartes seems to have been very well aware of the assumptions and goals of the modern scientific experiment and worldview and his whole enterprise was to provide a philosophical basis or justification for it. In that he had mixed success.
Remember, according to theory, what we see or experience as colour does not emerge in reality until there is a sensitive observer with the capacity to see, one; and two, the “information” that is the basis of colour in things still requires (two) “interpretation”. Colour does not come into the picture until after “two”. Science is giving us an objective basis for colour assignment and differentiation (different wavelengths, which are really just frequencies) but not the actual source of the colours themselves. It must be remembered that the scientific “world” is neither black nor white: it actually has no colour in it at all.