Journal of Consciousness Studies
jcs-online thread:
Forget qualia, zombies and zimboes

Forget ex-perience too!

Roland Cook

On Fri, 8 Mar 1996 Gordon.Globus@psyche.zynet.co.uk wrote:

Dear Globus,

I can understand your confusion. You want the qualities of the world to be in the world, not in the mind. That is, you don't want color (qualia) to be mental phenomena, but physical phenomena. That's fine.

In the world, colors, sounds, aromas, hardness, etc. exist as physically definable, or as you say, scientific descriptions. Colors are wavelengths of light. Sounds are vibrations in air. Aromas are chemical compounds floating in air. Hardness is repulsions among atomic fields. etc.

Unless, of course, you are thinking of qualia.

Or else, what you may be trying to say is that the physically definable qualities of the world are in the brain - as wavelengths, air vibrations, chemical compounds, repulsions among atoms. Which of course they are, as conceptual ideas of what the world out there is like.

But then I'm sure you don't mean that the conceptual ideas have color, sound, etc.

So, perhaps your confusion would disappear if you could clarify just what it is that has color? If the object in the world has color, do the wavelengths of light also have color, and how do these get into the brain, and how does the brain perceive the color of the wavelengths of light reflected from the object? Just for a start.

Roland Cook


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