He is basically saying "Hey, I am observing something, so observation is happening!" Even though he may not even
have any eyes with which to engage in such observation with. His observations can be wholly the result of an internal process.
Why is that a problem?
some of his other arguments seem to revolve around a curious notion that such observation would not be possible without the meat-based system he currently enjoys
I'm not sure where you're getting that idea. I'm not asserting that I definitely even
have a meat-based system. I thought I had made that extremely clear. For example, quote:
I could very well be a brain in a jar, or this could already be a computer simulation. I acknowledge that. That doesn't change the fact that I nevertheless am experiencing qualia.
I am making no claims about the accuracy of my experience as a representation of an external world. I can't know that an external definitely even exists.
Also, quote:
The fact of experience is the only thing that we can truly know for certain. That I am having an experience is a thing that I can absolutely, definitely know, because I am experiencing it. The experiencing of it does not necessarily mean that there's any genuinely external world out there for me to experience. All of reality could be a hallucination. Yes, its is an unjustifiable, illogical statement of faith to say that "I observe X, therefore X is correct and valid."
But the fact that experience is being had, that is certain. And it is the only thing that is certain.
My counter-argument is that subjective things are things that nobody can be sure of, not even the one who claims it. They can only be substantiated though an external means, be it a third party, or through an objective process.
What awareness do you have of any any "objective thing" except through your subjective experience? How do you substantiate anything, except through the lens of your subjective experience? What knowledge do you have of any "external means" or third party" apart from the fact that you're having a
subjective experience that you might interpret as external entities and third parties?
Your subjective experience is the
only thing you can "be sure of." You can be sure you're having your subjective experience...
because you're having it. Your only knowledge of these things you're arbitrarily assuming to be objective, comes to you via your subjective experience. Assuming that you have one and that you're not a zombie.
Nope, he simply BELIEVES he is experiencing.
I don't understand the distinction you're trying to make. I assert that an experience is being experienced. I know this, because I am experiencing it. You appear to be suggesting that I'm
not having an experience...but that I incorrectly believe myself to be having one.
...so, umm...if I'm experiencing the state of "mere belief" of having an experience...isn't that still having an experience?
I don't see how your objection is meaningful.
No, his argument is basically a modified form of Descartes, "I think, therefore I am," more specifically that that is the only thing he can be SURE of. That he is thinking, that he is observing, that is he experiencing. He can't be sure what he is experiencing is true, he can't be sure that anyone or everyone around him is ALSO experiencing, or even what form that experience is to them, but he can be sure he is experiencing.
More or less. Though I've never actually read any Descartes besides the famous quote.
Much as it pains me to admit that i fit in a box, apparently there's a name for this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epistemological_solipsism"...is the variety of idealism according to which only the directly accessible mental contents of the solipsistic philosopher can be known. The existence of other minds and the external world generally is regarded as an unresolvable question, although this doesn't negate the probability of its existence. Epistemological solipsists claim that realism begs the question: assuming there is a universe that is independent of the agent's mind, the agent can only ever know of this universe through the agent's senses."As far as i'm concerned, the only logically consistent definition for "reality" is "that which is experienced." Objective reality is not a useful concept. Even if we assume that there are minds besides our own, each having their own experiences...none of them are experiencing anything other than what they're experiencing.
Right? This should be obvious:
You're experiencing what you're experiencing. X=X. You are not experiencing what you are not experiencing. Not X = Not X.
Even if you assume an objective reality,
of what use is it besides the extent to which it is experienced? If you're not experiencing it, what does it matter? If you are experiencing it, ok that's fine...but how is that any different from a mind that isn't experiencing it? Each of you know only what you experience. There is no measure of reality besides that which is experienced.
Imagine a guy in an insane asylum vividly hallucinating that he's a daisy. Of what use is your world of cars and computers to him if he has no awareness of it? "Oh," you suggest, "But I can stab him in the face, and the objective reality of being stabbed in the face will affect him."
If it does, then it remains that his particular experiencing of the event is the thing that he experiences. X=X. Perhaps he experiences your stabbing him in the face as an ant chewing off some of his leaves. Perhaps he experiences your stabbing him in the face as suddenly waking up in an insane asylum and realizing that he's human.
Either way, his experience of the event is the thing that he experiences, and his experience is his reality.
As for you,
you can't know that you actually stabbed the guy in the face, because you yourself could be in an insane asylum hallucinating the experience of stabbing somebody in the face.
* You could be a brain in a jar
* You could be in the Matrix
* You could be in an insane asylum hallucinating this entire conversation
* You could be an immortal spirit being incarnating into human form with self-imposed memory loss of previous lives
* You could be on your deathbed, experiencing a replay of your life in accelerated time
* You could be
playing RoyWhat possible subjective experience can objectively invalidate any of those theories?
There is no measure of reality besides subjective experience.