I wonder if Chalmers would say that patients with blindsight who gave correct answers to perceptual questions while being wholly unconscious of the perceptual experiences would have knowledge in such cases nonetheless. Perhaps this would be an implication of rejecting Internalism...
Think "brainwaves" in terms of non-physicality, non locality. There is an electromagnetic effect, but it's influence on the strongly electromagnetic environment of modern times is difficult to measure. What they need to begin researching is if an electromagnetic field can "travel" through space- through whatever transfer effect of energy...
It would be nice for him to give some credit to McLuhan (technology as the extensions of man?) and Merleau-ponty. He is less of a Cartesian and more of a phenomenologist.
I wonder if Chalmers would say that patients with blindsight who gave correct answers to perceptual questions while being wholly unconscious of the perceptual experiences would have knowledge in such cases nonetheless. Perhaps this would be an implication of rejecting Internalism...
soultorment27 1 year ago
I've always found this thesis highly counterintuitive but extremely hard to rebut.
GodlessPhilosopher 2 years ago
Think "brainwaves" in terms of non-physicality, non locality. There is an electromagnetic effect, but it's influence on the strongly electromagnetic environment of modern times is difficult to measure. What they need to begin researching is if an electromagnetic field can "travel" through space- through whatever transfer effect of energy...
lollolllolllll 1 year ago
It would be nice for him to give some credit to McLuhan (technology as the extensions of man?) and Merleau-ponty. He is less of a Cartesian and more of a phenomenologist.
lralon 2 years ago
Comment removed
polymath7 1 year ago
ehm tripod?
4567mariusz 2 years ago 3