This is not intended to be an evolution thread, but it has been suggested by Daniel Dennet, a “philosopher,” that characteristics like sweetness don’t really exist. Rather, our brains create the taste of sweetness because sugar is a source of energy. In this way, our brains “trick” us into eating sugar for energy.
Yes, and we’re the better for it, such a trick. That’s one reason we are still around the planet, talking about stuff. But I note that Dennett did not say sweetness doesn’t really exist as a cognitive artifact; manifestly it does, and if you read any of his books, this is not a controversial subject for Dennett.
Rather, Dennett is pointing out that there is nothing inherently “sweet” in sugar, in some intrinsic, qualitative sense. That’s why he says "you could examine the molecule until you go blind and not find the ‘sweetness’.
Put another way, if a compound we currently find repulsive bitter was as important and usable and high-energy as a food source for humans, in
that scenario, we would find this bitter substance “sweet”, “desirable”, “yummy”, etc. “Sweet” is just whatever-happens-to-be-checmically-desirable, no matter what the molecular formulas are.
This still affirms the reality of “sweet” as a cognitive response. The neurons and synapses are perfectly really and firing away accordingly. It’s a construct (a real one) that the mind generates as a way to prioritize our preference in survival-aiding ways.
What do you guys think? What philosophical implications, if any, does this have? I myself have never considered it that way before, and I’m not sure what to make of it philosophically.
It’s well grounded in our science. That’s more than we can say for “sweetness is a cosmic value” or “sweetness is chemically intrinsic to a sugar molecule”.
Dennet’s explanation reveals the absurdity of materialism.
I know this is said with a straight face, but if I didn’t, I’d say this was a nice caricature of the “inversion of reason” dude (MacKenzie) in the linked video. “Absolute ignorance is the artificer” (!).
He might as well as argue that our thoughts and feelings don’t really exist but are created by the brain.
“created by the brain” does not mean “doesn’t really exist”. Look at the terms you used – “created”. It’s a thing-created. It’s real, it’s just not rooted in the sugar itself – our intuitions fail us again – but in that-which-it-behooves-us-to-prize. A function of our evolutionary biology. This is cool because it is a measure of understanding the self, a look into why we behave and interpret things the way we do.
It is a magnificent example of the cart being put before the horse! Even though the brain exists the concept of the brain is created by our mind. All knowledge presupposes the mind and not the brain.
Dennett has so nailed it on this one, as this bit shows. The “inversion of reason”, indeed. The mind is a creation of the brain – you can even watch the brain form before there is any mind, cognition, or electrical activity in the cerebral cortex.
To presuppose the mind is NOT to deny the unity of brain and mind.
-TS