Quote:
Perhaps it is a problem, just a different kind of problem?
Logical positivists claimed that there are only two kinds of meaningful statements. Either Analytic (True/False by the meaning attached to the words used) or Synthetic (True if empirically verified). All other statements were judged to be meaningless.
However, Karl Popper critisised this school of thought in two ways: Firstly, by saying that no statements can be empirically verified (only falsified) and secondly, that metaphysical statements, although outside of science, were still valid in their own way. Metaphysical propositions were stil valid problems for consideration, just not by scientists.
The point of what I am saying is that the problem of understanding consiousness cannot be dismissed even if we agree that it is metaphysical. It is just a different kind of problem.
All Synthetic statements are inherently Analytic and thus logically verifiable. This is also derived from subjectivity. All phrases without meaning are not statements.
Quote:
No, you are incorrectly reducing my statement to a contradiction. I am saying that I can subjectively observe something which is not inter-subjectively (objectively) observable. Something doesn't have to be objectively observable by everyone to be observable to me. It is something internal to my own mindscape and there is no reason why it should be objectively visible to everyone else.
Thus, there is no contradiction.
No i'm not. Consciousness is awareness. Awareness is the ability to observe. Thats what we are, observers. You argue that we also are "knowers" and even thought it has no practical meaning, or any meaning at all you argue that "you just know it" what difference does it make if you know it or not?