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Title: Today


1
Todays Lecture
  • A comment about your final Paper
  • Third in-class quiz and grade spreadsheet
  • Kathleen Atkins

2
A comment about your final Paper
  • I am giving you a bonus day of grace to get your
    final Paper in to me.
  • Three things to note about this extra day of
    grace
  • (1) It means that IF you get your paper to me, or
    the assignment drop box, by 400 p.m. on August
    11th, THEN you will not receive any late
    penalties for your paper.
  • (2) This extra day of grace only applies to your
    Paper.
  • (3) Technically, this does not change the due
    date for the paper (which remains August 8th).
  • (4) If you have any extra day s of grace
    remaining you can add them to this bonus day.

3
Third in-class quiz and grade spreadsheet
  • Do remember that due to my oversight in not
    giving a third in-class quiz, each of you have
    received an automatic 2 out of 2 for the quiz
    that wasnt.
  • Today I am placing a randomized grade spreadsheet
    on the course website (look for your grades under
    the columns associated with your student ID
    number). Please check to ensure that the data
    matches what you have. If there are any
    discrepancies, come and see me.

4
Preliminary comments Animal minds
  • Several books come to mind if you want to explore
    the issue of animal minds
  • Bekoff, Marc. 2002. Minding Animals Awareness,
    Emotions, and Heart. New York Oxford University
    Press.
  • Griffin, Donald. R. 1992. Animal Minds. Chicago
    The University of Chicago Press.
  • Savage-Rumbaugh, Sue, Stuart G. Shanker and
    Talbot Taylor. 1998. Apes, Language, and the
    Human Mind. New York Oxford University Press.
  • Wrangham, Richard W., W.C. McGrew, Frans de Waal,
    and Paul G. Heltne, eds. 1994/96. Chimpanzee
    Cultures. Cambridge (MA) Harvard University
    Press.

5
Preliminary comments Qualia and intentionality
  • In the course of her discussion, Kathleen Atkins
    makes mention of qualitative states and
    intentional states.
  • We have already encountered the notion of
    intentional states. For a state to be intentional
    it must be about something.
  • Bailey puts it this way
  • Sometimes philosophers use intentional in the
    everyday sense, to mean something which is done
    on purpose, but frequently they use it to mean
    instead something which is about (directed at,
    represents, of) something else. Thus, for
    example, a sentence, a thought, an action, a
    sculpture, or a map can be intentional (or have
    intentionality) while a person, a star, or a
    house usually are not (FP, p.435).

6
Preliminary comments Qualia and intentionality
  • Mental states that are intentional states possess
    representational content.
  • Bailey, among many other philosophers of mind,
    holds that not all mental states are intentional
    (i.e. not all mental states possess
    representational content).

7
Preliminary comments Qualia and intentionality
  • Qualitative states are mental states that possess
    a certain or particular feel to them. The
    particular feel of a mental state is often
    referred to as a quale (singular), and the feel
    of various mental states as qualia (plural).
  • Bailey, again, puts it this way
  • The sensations of being tickled and the smell
    of cooking onions both have a distinctive feel to
    them there is something it is like for you to
    be tickled (FP, p.390).

8
Preliminary comments Qualia and intentionality
  • William Lycan puts it this way
  • The quale of a mental state or event
    (particularly a sensation) is that state or
    events feel, its introspectible phenomenal
    character, its nature as it presents itself to
    consciousness (Lycan, William. 2003. Philosophy
    of Mind. In The Blackwell Companion to
    Philosophy. Second Edition. Edited by Nicholas
    Bunnin and E.P. Tsui-James. Malden (MA)
    Blackwell Publishers Ltd., p.185).

9
Preliminary comments Qualia and intentionality
  • When thinking back to Nagels paper, his worries
    about what it is like to be a bat can be
    understood as worries about the qualia a bat
    experiences.
  • His general thesis can be understood as
    contending that current physicalist theories of
    mind cannot accommodate qualia (either
    experienced by human or nonhuman animals) (CP,
    p.54).
  • Kathleen Atkins paper is partially directed
    towards Nagels paper.

10
Kathleen Atkins
  • Kathleen Atkins is a contemporary philosopher at
    Simon Fraser University in British Columbia.
  • She primarily works in philosophy of mind and
    neurophilosophy.
  • Like Nagel, she is a metaphysical physicalist.

11
A Bat without Qualities? Preliminary remarks
  • Atkins opens up with a discussion of birds of
    prey and certain properties of their eyes.
  • Eagles, notes Atkins, have more than one fovea (a
    small portion of the retina densely packed with
    receptor cells CP, p.53) in each eye with
    which to scan their immediate environment.
  • Humans have only one fovea.
  • The fovea of an eye enables the organism that
    possesses it to bring certain features of its
    immediate environment into focus. Peripheral
    vision is that which is visually perceived
    outside of the foveated area of the eye (CP,
    p.53).

12
A Bat without Qualities? Preliminary remarks
  • Imagine the foveated regions of the eagles eye
    as resembling a barbell. You have two fovea in
    each eye connected together by a horizontal band
    of densely packed receptor cells (CP, p.53).
    These fovea point outwards to the left and right
    of the eagle, taking in different areas of the
    immediate environment (CP, p.53).
  • There is also an extra pair of (temporal) fovea
    pointing forward, converging on a shared field
    (CP, p.53), much like our own foveated are of our
    eyes, except with three times the density of
    receptor cells (CP, 53).
  • Now imagine what it is like to be an eagle. This
    is an analogous problem to the one suggested by
    Nagel (CP, pp.53-54).

13
A Bat without Qualities? The Problem
  • I dont think we need to go into a lot of detail
    here rehashing Nagels discussion as described by
    Atkins (Ill leave that part of the reading to
    you).
  • Some things bear mentioning
  • (1) Nagels problem is a clash between the
    purportedly essential subjective component of
    conscious experience and the need for a
    non-subjective point of view (i.e. an objective
    point of view) in the natural sciences (CP,
    p.54).
  • (2) The only way to understand the conscious
    experience of another is through extrapolation
    from our own (i.e. the human communitys)
    experiences of consciousness (CP, p.54).

14
A Bat without Qualities? The Problem
  • Atkins uses the example of migraines, or
    radically alien sapient species, to bring out the
    intuitive grounds for the kind of problem Nagel,
    and others, are attempting to highlight.
  • The basic thought here is that the intensity of
    pain associated with migraines is something that
    cannot be fully communicated to those lacking
    experience with this form of headache.
    Alternatively, the qualia of an extraterrestrial
    organism significantly different in its
    neurophysiology than anything on earth seems
    unimaginable (CP, p.54).

15
A Bat without Qualities? The Problem
  • Atkins now directs our focus to how this problem
    might be manifest in science, rather than in the
    imaginations of the unschooled. As she notes,
    this is the primary focus of Nagels discussion
    after all (CP, p.54).
  • She uses, here, the example of the various pain
    states associated with the breaking of a toe. If
    we can imagine that science, at some point in the
    future, yields a complete picture of the
    neurophysiological porcesses or mechanisms
    responsible for pain production, we will still,
    it is thought, be unable to understand pain
    states we have not ourselves experienced directly
    (CP, p55).

16
A Bat without Qualities? The Problem
  • She also (rightly) notes that this is not a
    (subtle) way for certain philosophers to reject
    metaphysical materialism. It is simply an
    expression of a skepticism that our knowledge in
    these areas of the study of mind can be completed
    without having the requisite experiences
    ourselves (CP, p.55).

17
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • Atkins now introduces the idea of a film, made by
    future scientists, and visually representing (in
    3-D) the information being received by a bat as
    it omits sounds at frequencies ranging from 60 to
    20 khz while on the hunt for food (in this case
    mealworms being thrown into the air by an
    experimenter) (CP, p.55). Remember this is a
    fiction.
  • What we will see on the film, where the sound has
    been translated into colors, is a mass of
    changing color schemes, coalescing and then
    dispersing, as the bat pursues its prey. This
    will not look like anything we would see were we
    the ones on the hunt. This is, rather, what it is
    like to hunt when one is a bat (CP, p.56).

18
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • Prima facie problems with this suggestion
  • (1) In watching the film we still lack the
    sympathetic sensations (CP, p.56) associated
    with travelling through the air, or actually
    perceiving and then chasing the thrown mealworm.
  • (2) We lack the requisite knowledge of what is
    what as we watch the changing shapes and colors
    to be able to understand the events transpiring
    as experienced by the bat.
  • (3) We cannot translate what we are seeing into
    what the bat would be seeing in its environment
    (CP, p.56).

19
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • What do you think of Atkins claim that we could
    learn a lot about the experience of hand-gliding
    from watching a 3-D film of a sky-diver, from the
    moment she leaves the aircraft to her soft
    landing (CP, p.56)?
  • Is this not dependent on having analogous
    experiences (or experience sets), or being at a
    certain level of cognitive maturity? Does this
    make a difference to her argument here?

20
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • At first glance the problem seems to be that we
    use our visual system in importantly different
    ways than how a bat uses its auditory system.
  • However, we might think that we can compensate
    for this by becoming aware of how the colors
    represent what the bat is perceiving.
  • First, the hue of the sensations (red, green,
    blue, etc.) encoded the frequency of the sound
    waves second, the brightness of the colors gave
    the volume or intensity of the sound and, third,
    the configuration of the patches showed,
    straightforwardly, the spatial properties of the
    sound waves (CP, pp.56-57).

21
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • Now, though this will not yield an analysis, or
    understanding, of what it is the bat does to
    process auditory information when in pursuit of a
    tossed mealworm, it seems to promise to give us
    the feeling of what that pursuit is like (CP,
    p.57).
  • That is to say, this film may, at least for some
    philosophers and under its present description,
    give us the feel of what it is like to pursue a
    mealworm using sonar, though it will not give
    us the bats point of view (what it is like for
    the bat per se). We still lack the
    representational, or intentional, content that
    makes this experience meaningful to the bat (CP,
    p.57).

22
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • This suggested interpretation, which now seems to
    hold out the hope of knowing the dual aspects
    (i.e. the qualitative and representational
    aspects ) of experience albeit separately, will
    only work if we can intelligibly separate qualia
    from the representational content of an
    experience (or set of experiences), and this, for
    Atkins, is unlikely (it would be like separating,
    in any substantial way, the experience of color
    and the experience of that which is colored when
    examining the perception of a colored thing) (CP,
    pp.57-58).

23
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • Perceiving (or imagining) moving colored patches
    on a screen is an intentional - or, at least,
    quasi-intentional - event, an experience of
    colored patches as colored patches. So when we
    imagined the bat film, we did not thereby imagine
    pure sensory qualities, color qualia devoid of
    content (CP, p.58).

24
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • Part of the problem that Atkins thinks is present
    both in the attempt to read the bat film as
    conveying feeling or qualia and with Nagels
    contention that functionalism leaves out
    consciousness, is the view that conscious
    experience consists in bundles of qualia (CP,
    p.58).

25
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • This is misleading for the following reasons
  • (1) Just because we converse with others about
    unique or shared experiences, does not mean that
    we are isolating the feel of experiences from
    their intentional content in our discussions. It
    is unlikely that our problems, in such
    discussions, with communicating unique
    experiences has to do with the lack of a
    reference to the pure qualitative aspects of the
    states to which we are referring. For Atkins, we
    do not, and cannot, refer to such purely
    qualitative aspects (or to qualia abstracted from
    intentional content) when describing our
    conscious experiences (CP, p.58).

26
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • (2) Consequently, a point of view, say one like
    our own, is not merely a bundle of qualia. Our
    conscious experiences have both qualitative and
    intentional aspects that cannot be meaningfully
    separated. If this is our starting point for
    talking of (human or bat) points of view (which
    are then successfully carried out if we can
    successfully extrapolate from our own cases), we
    have no good reason for thinking that a bats
    point of view consists of bundles of qualia (CP,
    p.58).

27
A Bat without Qualities? The Film
  • According to Atkins, these two considerations
    allow us to reject the problem of What it is
    like to be a Bat as developed by Nagel (and
    others like him).
  • Given that qualia and intentional content seem to
    be inextricably linked, AND that we seem to be
    making headway in understanding intentionality,
    there is no prima facie reason to be pessimistic
    that science will one day give us the picture of
    what it is like to be a bat (CP, p.58).

28
A Bat without Qualities? Ourselves as subject
  • This inquiry may yield interesting results in the
    study of our own phenomenology. (After all, it
    would seem that we misdescribe the problem
    attaching to communicating unique experiences to
    a fellow human).
  • Consider the eagle example that began the paper.
  • Atkins would rightly suggest that we cannot
    duplicate the point of view of the eagle by
    merely wearing the right set of focal lenses and
    then attending to the ways this allows us to
    focus in on various areas of our respective
    fields of vision. After all, there is no inner
    eye of the eagle, which is the eagle looking
    through various foveated regions of its eyes. It
    probably attends to its field of vision all at
    once, or at least can do so (CP, p.59).

29
A Bat without Qualities? Ourselves as subject
  • Atkins thinks that this point is obviously right.
  • But it actually raises an important additional
    point about our own self-perceptions. It could be
    that our understanding of introspection, as some
    kind of inner eye that roams and illuminates
    various regions of our mind, is as equally
    wrong-headed, and even indicates how our own
    visual processes color our understanding of
    conscious attentive processes as a whole (CP,
    p.59).

30
A Bat without Qualities? Ourselves as subject
  • If this is a real possibility, it could be that,
    contra the traditional view on the matter, we do
    not have special infallible access to the
    content, character or nature of our own minds. At
    least, it could be possible that we frequently
    misdescribe what is going on in our minds (CP,
    p.59).
  • Atkins asks us to imagine ourselves in the not
    uncommon experience of struggling through a door
    while over-laden with groceries. Though we can
    parse the various conscious mental events taking
    place, or that must have taken place, as we
    struggled through the door, this does not
    represent the actual state of affairs that took
    place in that circumstance. As Atkins suggests,
    everything happens at once (CP, p.59).

31
A Bat without Qualities? Ourselves as subject
  • Perhaps, then, the explanation does the other
    way about perhaps the searchlight metaphor,
    combined with our story-telling practices and our
    understanding of the relevant causal chain of
    events, confer order upon the conscious events
    only in retrospect. ... What the eye of the eagle
    should make us wonder is whether our conception
    of ourselves might not be tainted with the same
    foveal metaphors we naturally apply to other
    creatures (CP, p.59).

32
A Bat without Qualities? Ourselves as subject
  • Note Atkins is not suggesting that the spotlight
    theories of conscious attention (CP, p.59) are
    obviously wrong.
  • What she is suggesting is that it is not
    obviously right that science will never have
    anything of substance to say about either the
    points of view of nonhumans or even the points of
    view of humans.
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