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by PaulDavisThe1st
442 days ago
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> 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? 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. |
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> 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.
Let me rephrase then:
If a tiger is distinct from a brain state, which I think we agree on, and if our thoughts can be 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?
A brain state does not refer to a tiger.