> On Mon, 30 Sep 1996 23:32:12 -0500 (CDT) Kenneth Boyd wrote:
>  
> >> > The problem with subjective entities such as desire and qualia is that they
> >> > can only ever be observed, never proven or measured.
> 
> >Steve, I'm going to need to know what you mean by "observe" and "measure" 
> >before the conflict between the two becomes intelligible to me.  
> 
> An alternative word to "observe" is "experience". As David Chalmers says,
> seeing "redness" can only ever be experienced. It is the *meaning* that our
> brain attributes to a wavelength of light and arguably, there is no aspect
> of this experience that is measurable. Not even, for example, measuring the
> electrical current passing between neurons, or understanding the nature of
> the neural circuitry would shed light on this subjective experience - even
> if it was possible for science to develop to so detailed a level (David
> Chalmers calls this circuitry perspective the 'easy' problem and the
> subjective experience aspect the 'hard' problem). "Measure", on the other
> hand, is when we try to quantify a value, eg, as by measuring a length or a
> weight - though I have some things to say in relation to the subjectivity of
> this "objective" experience as well!
Clear enough.  However, notice: while the qualia of "redness" can 
only be experienced, whether a physical object evokes this qualia in a 
normal-color vision human under specified conditions IS objective.
[I had to specify the normalcy of the color vision.  There are spectra, 
in wavelength terms, that evoke distinct qualia for R/G color-blind persons, 
while evoking identical[indistinguishable] qualia for normal-color vision 
persons.]
[A more extreme example (Oliver Sacks' "An Anthropologist from Mars") is 
an artist who lost all color vision about 4 days after a car accident.  
Apparently, the damage totally deleted the part of the brain that imparts 
color perception.  When tested using the Mondrian test [whatever that 
is; it needs many colors of light], the artist could only see raw light 
intensity--he was describing that part MUCH faster than anyone could 
compute it.  This actually is worth something in my science fantasy 
background.]
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/   Kenneth Boyd
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