ruby sparks
Contributor
Dennett, following Wittgenstein, is quite clear that we never communicate anything with a phenomenal character, only our judgements about that phenomenal character. If we could directly communicate the phenomenal character of things, then there would be no problem of other minds.
What Dennett is up to here, and which he finishes off in Consciousness Explained, is demonstrating over and over again that how things seem to us is a dreadful guide to how they are. Ultimately, his final argument will be that all we have is our judgements about phenomenal character....
That is all fine, imo.
.... and that there simply isn't any determinate content below those judgements.
What does this bit mean?
I have to say that at this point, we don't appear to be at a case for qualia not existing, no matter how private or unreliable they are.
I'd plump for real yet beyond language. I'm ok with ineffable, for instance.
