| Earlier upthread, I said >> the thought "tiger" [is] not the same thing as the brain state that makes [it] up. To which you said > Asserted without evidence. This was in the context of my saying >> There is undoubtedly correlation between neurological state and thought content. But they are not the same thing. Now you say > the thing you are thinking about is not the same as your thinking about it, nor the same as your brain state when thinking about it. Are we at least agreed that the content of the thought "tiger" is not the same thing as the brain state that makes it up? > The question however is whether there is anything to "thinking about thing" other than the brain state you have when doing so. This is unknown at this time. If a tiger is distinct from a brain state, which I think we agree on, and if our thoughts are about real things such as tigers, which I assume we agree on, then how can there not be more to thought than the associated brain state? |
No. I don't agree that "the content of [a] thought" is something we can usefully talk about in this context.
Thoughts are subjective experiences, more or less identical to qualia. Thinking about a tiger is actually having the experience of thinking about a tiger, and this is purely subjective, like all qualia. The only question I can see worth asking about it is whether the experience of thinking about a tiger has some component to it that is not part of a fully described brain state.
> If a tiger is distinct from a brain state, which I think we agree on, and if our thoughts are about real things such as tigers,
We also have thoughts about unreal things. I don't see why such thoughts should be any different than the ones we have about real things.