Humans and other sentient beings

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Yet in the case of the car, I may still consider it “my” car, but it is not - it is a new collection of parts. A few car aficionados may disagree, but no one thinks cars have souls. Humans are quite different, and we still consider you “you” even if none of your original atoms (or parts) remain. You seem to be jumping to the conclusion about what is argued - how do we know that the mind is the activity of the brain? It logically seems to be a mechanism by which consciousness orders the body - how can you make the assumption that it is the other way around, that the mind is a by-product of the physical activity of the brain? Do you believe the latter but not the former? If you believe both, would that not be an example of circular reasoning which lacks explanatory power?
While humans do cycle through the vast majority of their atoms every 7 years, certain atoms in the nervous system are not actually exchanged. However, this is not quite relevant to the question of the soul. Forms persist as long as there is continuity of matter (consider a wave). The reason a car does not have a form is because it is an artifact, rather than a genuine substance, although for similar reasons, as long as there is still substantial continuity of parts, it makes sense to speak of it as the same car.
 
Yet in the case of the car, I may still consider it “my” car, but it is not - it is a new collection of parts. A few car aficionados may disagree, but no one thinks cars have souls. Humans are quite different, and we still consider you “you” even if none of your original atoms (or parts) remain. You seem to be jumping to the conclusion about what is argued - how do we know that the mind is the activity of the brain? It logically seems to be a mechanism by which consciousness orders the body - how can you make the assumption that it is the other way around, that the mind is a by-product of the physical activity of the brain? Do you believe the latter but not the former? If you believe both, would that not be an example of circular reasoning which lacks explanatory power?

Let’s say “consciousness” rather than soul in this case - the “You” that thinks and makes decisions, and in the view of most, has free will.
“in the view of most”? Like who? We are made. We are not machines. We are certainly not biological robots. If anyone reading this is Catholic, know that we have a spirit, a soul, that will survive death.

Peace,
Ed
 
“in the view of most”? Like who? We are made. We are not machines. We are certainly not biological robots. If anyone reading this is Catholic, know that we have a spirit, a soul, that will survive death.

Peace,
Ed
Of course we do! I qualified the phrase “in the view of most” because there is a rising number of those who hold to a strictly materialist, determinist worldview who deny that we possess free will, as Sam Harris does. The geneticist Francis Crick expressed this view as  “‘You,’ your joys and your sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of personal identity and free will, are in fact no more than the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules. Who you are is nothing but a pack of neurons.”

From the perspective of an evangelizing Catholic, I support them in this - nothing will more effectively dissuade a person from a materialist, reductionist, atheist viewpoint than trying to convince them that the free will they clearly experience is “only an illusion.” This is in conflict with the experience of mankind, and the shared perceptions of the non-pathological.
 
Arizona Mike:
Yet in the case of the car, I may still consider it “my” car, but it is not - it is a new collection of parts.
This brings up another interesting question. Are you the same “person” as that toddler you were once? All your “parts” (atoms) have been replaced since then.
Arizona Mike:
A few car aficionados may disagree, but no one thinks cars have souls.
Since the “soul” not really well-defined, this is not a surprise. Though there are some people () followers of Aristotle) who say that the “soul” is the “form”, and for them, the car definitely has a “soul”. (What use is it, is a different question.)
Arizona Mike:
Humans are quite different, and we still consider you “you” even if none of your original atoms (or parts) remain.
Why would they be different?
Arizona Mike:
You seem to be jumping to the conclusion about what is argued - how do we know that the mind is the activity of the brain?
Every experiment points to that conclusion. Every time to get some new information, there is a physical change in the brain. Every time your neurons fire, your mind changes. Every time we “mess” with the brain by stimulating certain areas via mild electronic current (there is a pleasure center and pain center) your mind will reflect that change. And here we are NOT talking about science fiction.
Arizona Mike:
It logically seems to be a mechanism by which consciousness orders the body - how can you make the assumption that it is the other way around, that the mind is a by-product of the physical activity of the brain? Do you believe the latter but not the former?
Is there any experiment which would suggest the former? How does the assumed “independent” mind (whatever that is) interact with the body? You know, the adamant assertion that the “activity” of the brain and the “mind” are totally different, is rather amusing. Even believers cannot agree what the “soul” might be, and how it interacts with the brain.
Arizona Mike:
Let’s say “consciousness” rather than soul in this case - the “You” that thinks and makes decisions, and in the view of most, has free will.
What would be that nebulous, independent “consciousness” be? How does it interact with the brain?

But all this is a new subject and has nothing to do with the topic.
 
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MPat:
Are you sure? Adding an artificial organ is not that different from putting on glasses. But a human with glasses is, well, a human with glasses, not a “being”, whose part is the “original” human.
Well, yes. But you can exist without the glass. What about the heart, for example? The resulting being would be a “human” with an artificial heart – or you can say that the resulting being is partially a biological human with an artificial prosthesis. There is no difference between the two ways of “putting it”.
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MPat:
Thus I would offer an analogy. Let’s say we solve some sugar in the water. We get a solution of sugar. Now let’s replace one of molecules of sugar with molecule of water. It is still a solution with water. Let’s repeat the process many times. Finally we will get many molecules of water and one molecule of sugar. Is it still a solution of sugar? Well, I suppose… Let’s remove the last molecule of sugar. Do we still have a solution of sugar? Well, no. There is no sugar left.
That would be true, by itself – but not as an analogy. In the substitution process we assume that the replacing material “acts” like the original acted, that it is a functional equivalent. The water molecule is not a functional equivalent for the sugar molecule. Now, if you would replace each sugar molecule with a molecule of an artificial sweetener, then the analogy would be better. Not hundred percent precise, since the artificial sweetener may have “side-effects”, but definitely a good analogy. And what is the result? You would have a jar of “sweetened” water at the beginning, and a jar of “sweetened” water at the end. It is true that the “sweetening factor” would not be the “same”. But it would be “functionally the same”.
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MPat:
So, what we have here could be similar. Before the last step we had a human (consisting of one cell; I assume that it would be a human and not a corpse, as that would make the example uninteresting) with a huge machine meant to keep the human alive.
Not similar. In this “cyborgization” process (if there is such a word) we have a human with more and more organs replaced with a functionally equivalent artificial counterpart. If replacing the heart (for example) does not detract from the “humanness” of the subject, then neither does the replacement of the last cell. If you think that this is problematic, then ponder: “what is the significance of the last] cell? It could be any one of the original cells. There is a continuum of existence, and functionality for the whole organism. Just like in reality, when your atoms keep getting replaced by identical ones.
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MPat:
So, I’d say that there is a clear limit between cases 8 and 9.
Why would there be? Your original “analogy” was correct by itself, but incorrect as an analogy.
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MPat:
Assuming that by “sentient” you meant “rational” (normally correct terms wouldn’t matter that much, but here they make the solution much easier), cases 1 to 8 are clearly describing “rational animals” of some kind.
That I agree with. 🙂 I wonder why many others disagree.
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MPat:
Now, as kantus12 has said, “rational animal” is a definition of a human - therefore, in those cases we would be dealing with humans (not some kind of “honorary humans”). On the other hand, while in case 9 it is asserted that the beings are rational, it is not asserted that they are animals… Thus that might be a harder case…
Do you mean a “biological being” when you use the word “animal”? Or a specific subclass of biological beings, specifically: the “fauna”, but not the “flora”? What is so important about the building material? Why not a “rational being”, instead of a “rational animal”? Remember that the “dividing line” between “plants” and “animals” is rather fluid and arbitrary, and the “dividing line” between organic and inorganic material is also arbitrary.
 
Since the “soul” not really well-defined, this is not a surprise. Though there are some people () followers of Aristotle) who say that the “soul” is the “form”, and for them, the car definitely has a “soul”. (What use is it, is a different question.)
This characterization is of hylemorphism is so egregiously inaccurate that it’s unclear where to start. Saying that followers of Aristotle are committed to believing that cars have souls (which I explicitly disputed in #41) would be akin to saying that materialists are committed to denying that the mind exists. (It is actually far more egregious, since some materialists do deny that the mind exists, whereas you’ve made a straw man of every hylemorphist while claiming that they “definitely” believe it. It should be obvious why this is the height of intellectual dishonesty, if not ignorance.)
 
Methinks you have the idea of an Aristotelian “form” a wee bit skewed.

While I am not a philosopher, “form” is not the external shape or moldline. To him, the human “form” was not the solid bounded by the skin, but an irreducible essence. Socrates would go one further and identify the human “form” with the soul.

So the idea that automobiles have a “form” in the classic sense is AIUI an overextension.

ICXC NIKA
 
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GEddie:
Methinks you have the idea of an Aristotelian “form” a wee bit skewed.
Yes, of course. On purpose, to show how irrational the concept is.
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GEddie:
While I am not a philosopher, “form” is not the external shape or moldline. To him, the human “form” was not the solid bounded by the skin, but an irreducible essence.
Introducing another nonsensical concept (“irreducible” essence) will only double the irrationality. What is the “irreducible essence” of a car? What is the “essence” of a “truck”? Are they the same? Or only living things have “essence”? How does the essence of a “horse” differ from the essence of “cow”? By the way, how would that “irreducible essence” survive the decomposition of the matter after death – in the case of “humans”? To throw around new, undefined concepts like “essence” only serves confusion.
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GEddie:
Socrates would go one further and identify the human “form” with the soul.
And Plato would say that the actual reality is inaccessible to us, we only see a “distorted” view of it – distorted by our senses. Isn’t it time to drop those ancient philosophers into their proper place… the history books? It is mildly interesting how they speculated about what they did not understand, but that is all. Should we take the four “substances” of air, water, earth and fire seriously, just because some ancient guy speculated about them? Or the function of the brain to be the place of cooling the blood – as Aristotle speculated? Speculation is nice, as the first step about something new and as yet unexplained. But you cannot stop there and “intuit” that we now have an explanation.

But this is not the topic of the thread. Shall we return to it?
 
Yes, of course. On purpose, to show how irrational the concept is.
Since you admit to having “skewed” the Aristotelian notion of form “on purpose” in order to show how “irrational” it is, can you please delineate what hylemorphists actually claim a form is? I just want to make sure you know what you are rejecting before deliberately misrepresenting it “to show how irrational the concept is.”
Introducing another nonsensical concept (“irreducible” essence) will only double the irrationality. What is the “irreducible essence” of a car? What is the “essence” of a “truck”? Are they the same? Or only living things have “essence”? How does the essence of a “horse” differ from the essence of “cow”? By the way, how would that “irreducible essence” survive the decomposition of the matter after death – in the case of “humans”? To throw around new, undefined concepts like “essence” only serves confusion.
I’m guessing that Bagheera has blocked me, since I’ve pointed out a couple times that a car, being an artifact, does not have a form.

These articles may be relevant in counteracting the claims that soul is “not really well-defined” (#44), that there is such a thing as a “soul-hypothesis” that is competing with scientific development (#33), and that essence is a “new, undefined concept” that hylemorphists introduce ad hoc to evade criticism (#48):
Essence and Properties
Hylemorphic Dualism
The Immaterial Aspects of Thought
(I don’t mean to cite a bunch of articles and insist that hylemorphic dualism must be true because articles say so. I just mean to show that the claims that it’s a superstitious, undeveloped, undefined, question-begging theory are absolutely ludicrous and uncharitable.)
Isn’t it time to drop those ancient philosophers into their proper place… the history books? It is mildly interesting how they speculated about what they did not understand, but that is all. Should we take the four “substances” of air, water, earth and fire seriously, just because some ancient guy speculated about them? Or the function of the brain to be the place of cooling the blood – as Aristotle speculated? Speculation is nice, as the first step about something new and as yet unexplained. But you cannot stop there and “intuit” that we now have an explanation.
I am not familiar with any contemporary Aristotelians who agree that there are four substances or that the brain’s function is to cool blood. If anyone does believe those things and invokes them in a debate over philosophy of mind, would you mind citing their remarks? If not, then I think we could agree that they are quite irrelevant to any of the questions at hand.
 
Well, yes. But you can exist without the glass. What about the heart, for example? The resulting being would be a “human” with an artificial heart – or you can say that the resulting being is partially a biological human with an artificial prosthesis. There is no difference between the two ways of “putting it”.
Um, actually, I don’t think I get the difference at all… Was one of those cases supposed to be “human including artificial heart” and another one “human and artificial heart”…?

Anyway, a human can exist without a leg. Does it mean that you would not count “artificial leg” as a part of a “cyborg” (or something)…?

And also, humans cannot exist without air. But I doubt you would say that air (atmosphere) is a part of the human.

So, how exactly would you define if something is a part of human…?

By the way, it would be a bit less of a problem for Aristotle - he would probably say that atmosphere is not a part of human, because that matter does not have the form of human… But if you reject talk about forms as “irrational”, suddenly speaking about “humans” and their parts with any precision seems to become far more challenging…
That would be true, by itself – but not as an analogy. In the substitution process we assume that the replacing material “acts” like the original acted, that it is a functional equivalent. The water molecule is not a functional equivalent for the sugar molecule. Now, if you would replace each sugar molecule with a molecule of an artificial sweetener, then the analogy would be better. Not hundred percent precise, since the artificial sweetener may have “side-effects”, but definitely a good analogy. And what is the result? You would have a jar of “sweetened” water at the beginning, and a jar of “sweetened” water at the end. It is true that the “sweetening factor” would not be the “same”. But it would be “functionally the same”.
But what was the function of the sugar molecules? Just being there (thus “functionally equivalent” to water molecule), being sweet (thus “functionally equivalent” to molecule of artificial sweetener, but not to molecule of water), being a chemical reagent (thus not “functionally equivalent” to any other molecule)…? Note that I didn’t say what the solution was for. Or what was its “final cause”, if you wish to get some “Aristotlespeak”. 🙂
Not similar. In this “cyborgization” process (if there is such a word) we have a human with more and more organs replaced with a functionally equivalent artificial counterpart. If replacing the heart (for example) does not detract from the “humanness” of the subject, then neither does the replacement of the last cell. If you think that this is problematic, then ponder: “what is the significance of the last] cell? It could be any one of the original cells. There is a continuum of existence, and functionality for the whole organism. Just like in reality, when your atoms keep getting replaced by identical ones.
Er, wouldn’t it also depend on what counts as a function? If I say that function of heart is “being a part of human” and the function of artificial heart is “keeping the human alive”, they look “functionally different”. If you say that the function of both is “pumping blood”, they look “functionally equivalent”…
Do you mean a “biological being” when you use the word “animal”? Or a specific subclass of biological beings, specifically: the “fauna”, but not the “flora”? What is so important about the building material? Why not a “rational being”, instead of a “rational animal”? Remember that the “dividing line” between “plants” and “animals” is rather fluid and arbitrary, and the “dividing line” between organic and inorganic material is also arbitrary.
Well, I specifically meant that “5) animals, which became sentient due to some natural, random mutation” explicitly tells us we are dealing with “animals” and “9) fully electronic sentient beings” does not. If it said “9) fully electronic sentient animals”, everything would be different. Of course, I am not convinced that it does not talk about “a subset of an empty set”, but formally everything is OK (it did not stop me in other cases - though, to answer your other question, some others might be a bit less comfortable with that).

Anyway, as far as Aristotelian Philosophy is concerned, difference between “animal” and “plant” is clear: “animal” is sentient (able to feel) and “plant” is not. It is not easy to detect - I have no idea how one would check if an amoeba feels anything -, but then, how would we check if a human we’re speaking to is not a “philosophical zombie”…?
 
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MPat:
Um, actually, I don’t think I get the difference at all… Was one of those cases supposed to be “human including artificial heart” and another one “human and artificial heart”…?
Remove the artificial heart and you get a corpse. The rest is semantics.
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MPat:
Anyway, a human can exist without a leg. Does it mean that you would not count “artificial leg” as a part of a “cyborg” (or something)…?
Good observation! Just like a human can exist without a leg, the cyborg can exist without one, too. Both would be “handicapped”. So we arrive at the conclusion that we can get rid of everything except the organ which makes us human – our brain / mind complex. Such a human would be extremely handicapped, but if we equip him with artificial organs he will become fully functional again. (With the possible lack of the reproductive feature, but some “natural” humans are incapable of reproducing.) On the hand, remove the brain and you will get either a corpse or a bunch of artificial organs. Now, replace the organic brain with a functionally equivalent artificial counterpart, which performs exactly like the original did… and what do you get? “Human is as human does” – regardless of the material it is made of.
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MPat:
But what was the function of the sugar molecules?
To make the solution taste “sweet”.
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MPat:
If you say that the function of both is “pumping blood”, they look “functionally equivalent”…
Almost precise. They ARE functionally equivalent.
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MPat:
Anyway, as far as Aristotelian Philosophy is concerned, difference between “animal” and “plant” is clear: “animal” is sentient (able to feel) and “plant” is not.
A perfect example why this speculative philosophy is useless. The animal / plant dichotomy belongs to the science of biology. And as usual, the distinction is more in our mind than in reality. We like to put “things” into neat, little “boxes”. It is not the fault of the “things” that our “boxes” sometimes are not constructed properly, and so the “things” do not fit. (Recall the wave / particle dichotomy concerning the “true” nature of light.)
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MPat:
It is not easy to detect - I have no idea how one would check if an amoeba feels anything -, but then, how would we check if a human we’re speaking to is not a “philosophical zombie”…?
Another good comment. 🙂 The amoeba has no nervous system, so it cannot “feel” anything. And the “philosophical zombie” as just another one of those useless “boxes”. If you cannot tell the difference, then the distinction between the “human” and the “philosophical zombie” is meaningless.
 
Now, replace the organic brain with a functionally equivalent artificial counterpart, which performs exactly like the original did… and what do you get? “Human is as human does” – regardless of the material it is made of.
More equivocation as to “functional equivalence.” If you define “function” as “external behavior,” then you can get “functional equivalence.” But all of this stipulates that we should disregard intentionality and qualia, the presence of which would be necessary for true functional equivalence (and without which, you don’t quite have the real deal).
The animal / plant dichotomy belongs to the science of biology. And as usual, the distinction is more in our mind than in reality. We like to put “things” into neat, little “boxes”. It is not the fault of the “things” that our “boxes” sometimes are not constructed properly, and so the “things” do not fit. (Recall the wave / particle dichotomy concerning the “true” nature of light.)

And the “philosophical zombie” as just another one of those useless “boxes”.
It seems that, in your claims about plants, by boxes you are just referring to the vagueness of biological classification vis-a-vis Sorites paradox. While it’s doubtful whether such an idea can be applied to the division between plants and animals, which is rather stark, this seems clearly irrelevant to philosophical zombies… unless you mean something else.
If you cannot tell the difference, then the distinction between the “human” and the “philosophical zombie” is meaningless.
It seems that you’ve lowered the bar far too much for your concept of mind to have any meaning. The idea of the philosophical zombie is that it acts exactly as the human does but does not have qualia. If one pronounces the distinction between them as “meaningless,” then one’s theory simply doesn’t account for qualia. It’s incomplete.
 
More equivocation as to “functional equivalence.” If you define “function” as “external behavior,” then you can get “functional equivalence.” But all of this stipulates that we should disregard intentionality and qualia, the presence of which would be necessary for true functional equivalence (and without which, you don’t quite have the real deal).
Actually, it’s worse than that. If he would really define “function” as “external behavior”, things would work much better. But he seems to define it as “a subset of external behavior” - or at least the discussion about sugar seems to indicate that. Also, that “subset” seems to be completely arbitrary.

For example, I have asked him what is the function of sugar - explicitly listing three possibilities (just being there, being sweet, being a chemical reagent). The answer:
To make the solution taste “sweet”.
Tough luck for Chemistry… 🙂
Remove the artificial heart and you get a corpse. The rest is semantics.
No, there is a difference. If we have “human including artificial heart”, then, if the original human “malfunctions” (dies), we can replace him with “artificial human” who is “functionally equivalent” to him. Given what little I understand about “function” as you define it, I’d say, a tube will do just fine. 🙂 And everything is OK, surgery has been successful, time for the doctors to get paid for a job well done. 🙂

On the other hand, if we have “a human with artificial heart” then the “surgery” I mentioned is pointless, silly and (perhaps most importantly) does not have to be paid for. That is quite a difference for the doctors. 🙂

See, even “speculative” Philosophy is an applied science. 🙂
Good observation! Just like a human can exist without a leg, the cyborg can exist without one, too. Both would be “handicapped”. So we arrive at the conclusion that we can get rid of everything except the organ which makes us human – our brain / mind complex. Such a human would be extremely handicapped, but if we equip him with artificial organs he will become fully functional again. (With the possible lack of the reproductive feature, but some “natural” humans are incapable of reproducing.) On the hand, remove the brain and you will get either a corpse or a bunch of artificial organs. Now, replace the organic brain with a functionally equivalent artificial counterpart, which performs exactly like the original did… and what do you get? “Human is as human does” – regardless of the material it is made of.
Almost precise. They ARE functionally equivalent.
All that is useless unless we know how “function” is to be defined.
Another good comment. 🙂 The amoeba has no nervous system, so it cannot “feel” anything.
Well, it does not have a “digestive system”, but it seems to feed just fine. Maybe some group of protein molecules is functioning as a small nervous system that is sufficient for sentience and we just didn’t notice that yet…? 🙂
And the “philosophical zombie” as just another one of those useless “boxes”. If you cannot tell the difference, then the distinction between the “human” and the “philosophical zombie” is meaningless.
I would certainly disagree that a difference that we cannot detect from outside is not a difference. But that might be a suitable subject for a different thread…

Yet I will ask one question here… St. Thomas Aquinas (using the tools available at that time) could not tell the difference between the light with infinite speed and the light with finite but large speed. Given that, would you conclude that the speed of light was infinite about one thousand years ago…? 🙂
 
Actually, it’s worse than that. If he would really define “function” as “external behavior”, things would work much better. But he seems to define it as “a subset of external behavior” - or at least the discussion about sugar seems to indicate that. Also, that “subset” seems to be completely arbitrary.

For example, I have asked him what is the function of sugar - explicitly listing three possibilities (just being there, being sweet, being a chemical reagent). The answer:

Tough luck for Chemistry… 🙂
Very true. There is then the further circularity issue that the definition - to make the the solution sweet - is contingent upon a psychological property (sweetness, a quale), which is exactly what is in dispute. Not to mention, sugar mostly doesn’t function as sweet. It does quite a bit once it is in our body, away from our taste buds.
 
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polytropos:
More equivocation as to “functional equivalence.” If you define “function” as “external behavior,” then you can get “functional equivalence.”
What else? That is all available to you. There is no way to get into the “black box”, and find out “how it works”? All you can do is observe the behavior, and draw inferences.
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polytropos:
But all of this stipulates that we should disregard intentionality and qualia, the presence of which would be necessary for true functional equivalence (and without which, you don’t quite have the real deal).
Ah, but what is the “real” deal? What is the difference between the perfect emulation, and the “real” thing? If it is impossible to distinguish the emulation from the original, then it is meaningless to posit a “difference”. What is the difference between “1” and “0.999999999999….”? There is no difference.
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polytropos:
It seems that you’ve lowered the bar far too much for your concept of mind to have any meaning.
I don’t think so, but maybe you can bring up some arguments for it.
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polytropos:
The idea of the philosophical zombie is that it acts exactly as the human does but does not have qualia. If one pronounces the distinction between them as “meaningless,” then one’s theory simply doesn’t account for qualia. It’s incomplete.
Not incomplete. Sufficient. Consider a perfect actor, who can emulate any and all behaviors he chooses to. Why should the observer care if the actor “has” those feelings he displays, or not? Can ANYONE tell the difference?
 
Ah, but what is the “real” deal? What is the difference between the perfect emulation, and the “real” thing? If it is impossible to distinguish the emulation from the original, then it is meaningless to posit a “difference”. What is the difference between “1” and “0.999999999999….”? There is no difference.
The fact that there are two different numbers which you wrote reflects that there is a difference. 1 does not = 0.9999999999…
 
What else? That is all available to you. There is no way to get into the “black box”, and find out “how it works”? All you can do is observe the behavior, and draw inferences.

Ah, but what is the “real” deal? What is the difference between the perfect emulation, and the “real” thing? If it is impossible to distinguish the emulation from the original, then it is meaningless to posit a “difference”. What is the difference between “1” and “0.999999999999….”? There is no difference.
The real deal has intentionality and qualia which we know that we have. The point is that functional equivalence says nothing of whether these things are present. Behavior and functional equivalence are simply not a sufficient condition for the qualities that our minds have; you need some other reason to infer the other “minds” have those qualities. The point is that there is a difference, which functional equivalence is silent on.

It’s like John Searle’s Chinese room thought experiment. Functionalist responses tend to insist that the room+man is thinking by completing the algorithm that externally appears to be Chinese speech. But then one has just ignored qualia and intentionality - features of our own thoughts which are not present in or above the Chinese room.
Not incomplete. Sufficient. Consider a perfect actor, who can emulate any and all behaviors he chooses to. Why should the observer care if the actor “has” those feelings he displays, or not? Can ANYONE tell the difference?
Of course we care, whether or not we can tell the difference. It’s quite useful to know whether you’re talking to a conman or an honest salesman. Maybe the conman’s a good enough actor that we can’t tell. So much the worse for us, because regardless of the functional equivalence, the conman and the honest salesman have very different mental lives!
 
Arizona Mike:
The fact that there are two different numbers which you wrote reflects that there is a difference. 1 does not = 0.9999999999…
You are not a mathematician, are you? The “dots” at the end indicate infinitely many “9”-s. Here is a simple proof for you:

x = 0.999999….
10 * x = 9.999999….
Subtract the first line from the second line and you get
9 *x = 9
And therefore x = 1

Q.E.D.

Just because we used a different way to put it, the two sides are exactly the same.

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polytropos:
The real deal has intentionality and qualia which we know that we have. The point is that functional equivalence says nothing of whether these things are present.
If you have two human-looking entities in front of you, and one is a “real” human, while the other one is a “zombie”, what kind of experiment are you going to perform to find out, which one is which? Since the definition of the “zombie” stipulates that it cannot be told apart from the “real” human, there can be no such experiment. Therefore the rational conclusion is that it does not matter. In a sense it is precisely like the assumption of a “soul”.
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polytropos:
Behavior and functional equivalence are simply not a sufficient condition for the qualities that our minds have; you need some other reason to infer the other “minds” have those qualities. The point is that there is a difference, which functional equivalence is silent on.
How does that alleged difference “manifest” itself? Let’s put it this way: “if something cannot be detected, either directly or indirectly, now or ever, because it is inaccessible to us, then whether it exists or not is irrelevant”. As such it firmly belongs to the realm of useless speculation – which is either fiction or philosophy. 😉
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polytropos:
It’s like John Searle’s Chinese room thought experiment. Functionalist responses tend to insist that the room+man is thinking by completing the algorithm that externally appears to be Chinese speech. But then one has just ignored qualia and intentionality - features of our own thoughts which are not present in or above the Chinese room.
Can you “prove” that there is no “equivalent” of them?
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polytropos:
Of course we care, whether or not we can tell the difference. It’s quite useful to know whether you’re talking to a conman or an honest salesman. Maybe the conman’s a good enough actor that we can’t tell. So much the worse for us, because regardless of the functional equivalence, the conman and the honest salesman have very different mental lives!
**You gotta be kidding. Now we can tell the difference?? ** If there is no difference between a con man and an honest salesman, then on what grounds do you call one of them a “con man”? He does not look like a con man, does not ACT like a con man… so he is NOT a con man.

We deal here with the perfect copy “problem” (which is not a problem at all). Take any object and run it through the perfect copy machine. The machine gathers the necessary atoms and places them into the exact same configuration as the “original” one. As soon as the process is completed, there is no way to tell which one was the original and which one is the copy. None at all. Not even in theory. Therefore to speak of “original” and “copy” is a meaningless utterance.
 
You are not a mathematician, are you?

Just because we used a different way to put it, the two sides are exactly the same.
The unclearness may have come from the fact that you used the equality of two mathematically identical objects to make a point about two numerically distinct physical objects that do not share all of each other’s features.
If you have two human-looking entities in front of you, and one is a “real” human, while the other one is a “zombie”, what kind of experiment are you going to perform to find out, which one is which? Since the definition of the “zombie” stipulates that it cannot be told apart from the “real” human, there can be no such experiment. Therefore the rational conclusion is that it does not matter. In a sense it is precisely like the assumption of a “soul”.
I think you are missing the point of the thought experiment. I am a human; I have intentional and qualitative thoughts. The argument is that there could be a zombie with physical states identical to mine without intentional and qualitative thoughts. Obviously they cannot be told apart - that’s the point. The point is that if there were a mental difference, the physical facts wouldn’t tell you about it. But we know from our own experience that we have intentional and qualitative states, and the inability of any theory to deal with them is a nail in that theory’s coffin.
How does that alleged difference “manifest” itself? Let’s put it this way: “if something cannot be detected, either directly or indirectly, now or ever, because it is inaccessible to us, then whether it exists or not is irrelevant”. As such it firmly belongs to the realm of useless speculation – which is either fiction or philosophy. 😉
What do you mean how does it manifest itself? Do you have intentional and qualitative states? You might not be able to detect them in other humans, but that leaves you with the option of a). accepting that functionalism does not account for intentional and qualitative states or b). becoming an eliminativist about intentional and qualitative states. I don’t “speculate” about my intentional and qualitative states.

You seem to be reifying the problem of other minds. But so long as other humans are of the same kind that I am, it seems reasonable to suppose that they have minds. But since other considerations inform me that the physical facts alone can’t account for their minds, I am unjustified in thinking that a purely physical object that I create - an android, say - likewise has a mind. (Unless I decide to define “mind” in a very weak, insubstantial way - with respect to functional outputs.)
Can you “prove” that there is no “equivalent” of them?
You are going to say that I should believe that Searle’s Chinese room is having qualitative experiences - akin to my experience of red - unless I can prove that they are not there? The point is that it’s absurd to hold that the functional equivalence of the room to a native Chinese speaker implies that it “thinks” like the Chinese thinker does - unless you weaken the notion of “thinking” to the point of triviality.
You gotta be kidding. Now we can tell the difference?? If there is no difference between a con man and an honest salesman, then on what grounds do you call one of them a “con man”? He does not look like a con man, does not ACT like a con man… so he is NOT a con man.
From which part of “whether or not we can tell the difference” did you get “now we can tell the difference”? You might not be able to tell the difference on functionalism or some sort of dualism, or any other theory of mind. That’s just an epistemological point. Our inability to tell the difference is irrelevant. The point is that If functionalism is right, then our inability to tell the difference between an honest man and a conman means that their minds are equivalent, which is absurd.

Rather, suppose that you’re a very good actor who is emulating someone else. You manage to act indistinguishably from them, but since your aim is to emulate them, you know yourself that your mind is not identical to theirs. You might carry this emulation on until the end of both of your lives. So there was absolute functional equivalence to any external observer. But you, the actor, know that there was not equivalence of mind, so the standard of functional equivalence is simply insufficient.
We deal here with the perfect copy “problem” (which is not a problem at all). Take any object and run it through the perfect copy machine. The machine gathers the necessary atoms and places them into the exact same configuration as the “original” one. As soon as the process is completed,** there is no way to tell which one was the original and which one is the copy**. None at all. Not even in theory. Therefore to speak of “original” and “copy” is a meaningless utterance.
There is a way to tell which was the original. Say you copy X by creating Y. Then at the moment of creation, X and Y are not in the same location. So if you keep track of X, then you are keeping track of the original. If you keep track of Y, then you are keeping track of the copy. Maybe you lose track and they get switched around when you look away. Again, that’s just an epistemological point which has nothing to say of whether the two are identical, anymore than confusing two identical twins should make us doubt whether they are ontologically distinct. (This would be granting that such a thought experiment is not vacuous - which is doubtful.)
 
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