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What are qualia?
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All Flashcards in Topic 1.3
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1.3.111 cards
What are qualia?
The raw 'what-it's-like' feel of an experience — the redness of red, the sting of pain.
Consciousness (the core idea)?
There is something it is like to be you, from the inside — an inside feel a rock lacks.
Nagel's bat argument?
You could know every brain fact about a bat and still not know what it's LIKE to be one — physics leaves out the feel.
Mary's room?
Mary knows all the physics of colour but still learns something on first seeing red — so the feel is a fact physics left out.
The knowledge argument?
Complete physical knowledge still leaves out the inside feel — Nagel and Jackson's shared move.
The 'ability' reply to Mary?
She gains a new ability (to recognise red), not a new fact — so there may be no real gap.
Why is consciousness hard to explain?
Outside facts (brain, wavelengths) never seem to add up to the first-person feel of the experience.
First-person vs third-person view?
Third-person = the outside facts anyone can measure. First-person = the inside feel only the experiencer has.
The Chinese room (Searle)?
Following rules to output Chinese without understanding it — processing symbols isn't understanding.
Advaita witness-consciousness?
Indian view: awareness is the basic 'witness' behind all experience, not something built from matter.
Intelligence vs consciousness?
Acting smart (behaviour) is not the same as feeling (experience) — the heart of the debate.
1.3.28 cards
Intentionality of consciousness?
The 'aboutness' of the mind — every experience is OF or ABOUT something beyond itself.
Does 'intentionality' mean 'on purpose'?
No — it means aboutness: the mind is always directed at something, whether you plan it or not.
What is phenomenology?
The careful study of experience exactly as it is lived, first-person — a world of meaning, not brain-states.
Phenomenology's key claim?
We live in a world (a face, a room, a task), not inside a skull full of nerve signals.
Advaita Vedanta on consciousness?
Behind every experience is a pure awareness — the witness — that observes all thoughts and feelings.
Witness-consciousness (sākṣī)?
Pure awareness that watches all your thoughts and feelings without being any of them.
The arrow image of consciousness?
Consciousness is like an arrow — it always points at something. Advaita turns it round to the awareness that holds the arrow.
Why pair phenomenology with Advaita?
One studies what consciousness is OF (looks out); the other points to the awareness it appears IN (looks in) — Western + non-Western range.
1.3.38 cards
The mind–body problem?
Is a person one thing (a body) or two (a body plus a separate mind)?
Dualism?
You are two things: a physical body and a separate, non-physical mind (Descartes).
Physicalism?
You are one thing: a physical body; the mind just IS the brain at work.
Descartes' argument for dualism?
I can doubt I have a body but not that I'm thinking — so mind and body must be two different things.
The interaction problem?
If the mind is non-physical, how could it ever move the physical body? Dualism's deepest weakness.
One strength of dualism?
It fits the feeling that thoughts aren't physical — you can't weigh a thought or scan a feeling directly.
One strength of physicalism?
It fits brain science: damage the brain and the mind changes, so mind and brain seem tightly linked.
Physicalism's weak spot?
It struggles to explain the inside feel of experience (Nagel's 'what it's like'; see 1.3.1).
1.3.48 cards
The problem of other minds?
How to justify believing anyone else is conscious, when all you see is behaviour, never their inner feel.
Why is it a problem?
You have direct access to exactly one mind — your own. Everyone else you know only from the outside.
The argument from analogy?
In me, behaviour goes with a feel; others are like me; so they probably feel too — they're conscious.
Main weakness of the analogy?
It generalises from ONE case (yourself) — a shaky basis for a rule we'd distrust anywhere else.
A philosophical zombie?
An imagined being that behaves exactly like a conscious person but has no inner feel at all.
The sceptic's point?
If a zombie could behave the same with nothing inside, behaviour never guarantees an inner feel.
One reply to the sceptic (Go further)?
Doubting all other minds is impossible to actually live — seeing others as conscious may be built into how we perceive people.
Why does this connect to 1.3.1?
The inner feel (qualia) is exactly what you can't observe in others — the private feel is the whole difficulty.
1.3.58 cards
Folk psychology?
Our everyday, common-sense way of explaining people using beliefs, desires and feelings.
Eliminative materialism (Churchland)?
The view that our everyday mind-talk is a flawed old theory mature brain science may replace.
Churchland's analogy?
'Beliefs' and 'feelings' may go the way of 'evil spirits' — replaced by better science (germs).
Chalmers: easy vs hard problems?
Easy = how the brain sorts info, attends, wakes up. Hard = why any of it FEELS like something.
The hard problem of consciousness?
Explaining WHY there is any inner feel at all, rather than the brain just processing in the dark.
Why is the hard problem 'hard'?
A perfect brain map gives WHAT happens, never WHY it feels like anything — the feel is left out.
Churchland vs Chalmers?
Churchland: science will explain/replace the feel. Chalmers: the feel is a new kind of problem no brain map dissolves.
What lifts a Section A answer to the top band?
Exploring and weighing several views on the stimulus and reaching a reasoned conclusion — not describing one.
Topic 1.3 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Consciousness
Philosophy exam skills
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