One of the most intriguing of
philosophical puzzles concerns other minds. How do you know there are any? Yes,
you’re surrounded by living organisms that look and behave much as you do. They
even say they have minds. But do they? Perhaps other humans are mindless
zombies: like you on the outside, but lacking any inner conscious life,
including emotions, thoughts, experiences and even pain. What grounds do you
possess for supposing that other humans (including even me) aren’t zombies?
Perhaps less than you think.
At the dentist’s
The
scene: a dentist’s surgery. Finnucane is prostrate in the dentists chair, his
mouth stuffed with cottonwool balls. A balding and bespectacled dentist is
poking at a filling at the back of Finnucane’s mouth.
Dentist: Is it safe?….Is
it safe?
Finnucane: Aaaargh!
Dentist. No. It’s not
safe. It’s dropped out altogether. Very inferior quality filling. I shall
replace it. I’ll give you some pain-killer. Even though I don’t believe you
feel pain.
Finnucane
can’t believe what he’s hearing.
Dentist: That’s right. I
don’t believe you feel pain. In fact I
don’t believe you have a mind at all.
Finnucane
squints.
Dentist: Why? Because I
am The Rational Dentist, that’s why.
I’m not like those other dentists. I believe only what it’s reasonable to
believe. Open wide.
The
dentist takes a long silver syringe from a tray and slowly inserts the needle
into the soft flesh at the back of Finnucane’s mouth. Beads of moisture appear
across Finnucane’s forehead and his eyes widen in panic.Gradually the pain
starts to fade.
Dentist: Oh, I know what those other dentists say.
They say [in mocking tones], “But of
course I am justified in believing that my poor patient has a mind. I poke
his gums with one of these. And observe. He sweats. He writhes. He cries out.
Surely I have all the evidence I could possibly want that I’m dealing with
another conscious being like myself. He even tells me he’s in pain.”
The
dentist puts down the syringe and stares coldly at Finnucane.
Dentist: I’m not so easily fooled. All this so-called
“evidence” is totally unconvincing.
The private mind
Finnucane is astonished. How could anyone fail to believe that others
have minds? We would ordinarily consider such a person to be mad, dangerous
even. Yet the dentist insists he is merely being rational. He peers at
Finnucane.
Dentist: You’re looking quizzical. Allow me to
explain. My argument is simple. First, I cannot directly witness what goes on in another’s mind. I can observe
their outward behaviour. But I can’t observe what goes on inside their mind, if
they have one. Their experiences, beliefs, emotions, pains and so on – all are
hidden away. A mind is a private place. The most private place of all.
It seems the dentist is correct. Suppose, for example,
that you take a bite out of a lemon. You experience an intense bitter taste.
You are directly and immediately aware that that you are having this
experience. While others may experience the same sort of taste, it’s impossible
for you to verify this directly. You cannot, as it were, enter into another’s
mind and observe what they are experiencing along with them. The experiences of
others are necessarily hidden.
The dentist fumbles with his drill. Finnucane
watches nervously.
Dentist: Oh, I can guess what you would say were you
mouth not stuffed with cotton wool balls: “But you don’t have to rely on my behaviour. What if you were to scan what’s
going on in my brain? What if you put a fibre-optic probe in there, so that you
could see my pain neurones firing? Then you would have direct evidence that I’m
in pain.” That’s what you would say, correct?
Finnucane
nods.
Dentist: Wrong again! I still wouldn’t have direct
evidence. For how do I know that this sort of neurone firing is accompanied by
consciousness, by feelings of pain, in other human beings? Perhaps it’s only in
my own case that brain activity is accompanied by mental activity. Open wide
again.
The argument from analogy
The
dentist places a plastic suction tube in Finnucane’s mouth and begins to drill.
Dentist: Now the other dentists, they admit all this. They say, [again,
mockingly] “Okay, I admit you can’t have direct access to what’s going on in
the mind of another. But it doesn’t follow that you don’t have good reason to believe others have minds. You do.
Their behaviour provides you with
excellent grounds for supposing this. You
know in your own case that when
you’re pricked sharply, you feel pain. You also know that when you experience
that pain, you’re liable to flinch and yell. When you observe other human
beings, you find that when they are pricked sharply, they also flinch and yell.
Doesn’t that provide you with good grounds for supposing they experience pain
too?”
The argument just outlined by the dentist is called the argument from analogy. At first sight,
the argument looks highly plausible. Most of us, if asked to justify our belief
in the existence of other minds, would no doubt offer something similar. But as
the dentist is well aware, there’s a notorious difficulty with it.
A problem with the argument from analogy
Dentist: Open wider. Now of course I
understand this argument. I’m not a fool. But I am afraid the logic is faulty.
For you see, these other dentists are guilty of making an unwarranted generalization.
Finnucane is struggling to hear what the dentist is
saying over the noise of the drill.
Dentist: Let me explain why. Suppose
I cut open one thousand cherries and find every single one has a stone in the
middle. Surely I’m now justified in generalizing.
Surely I’m now justified in believing that all
cherries have stones in the middle. Admittedly, I might be wrong. But the one
thousand cherries that I have observed surely give me pretty good reason to
believe that all cherries have stones, reason sufficient to justify my belief.
Correct?
Finnucane nods.
Dentist: But now
suppose that, instead of basing my inference on an observation of a thousand
cherries, I base it on an observation of just
one. Then my inference would be very
shaky, wouldn’t it? My one cherry may provide some slight evidence in support of the claim that all cherries have stones,
but it’s surely not enough to justify my making that generalization. For all I
know, some cherries may have stones and some not, just as, for example, some
animals have male sex organs and some not. This may be a very unusual cherry,
just as an oyster with a pearl inside is very unusual. In order to justify my
generalization, I surely need to look inside very many cherries. Correct?
Finnucane: Uh huh.
Dentist: But now think about the argument of the
other dentists. It, too, is a generalization based on just a single
observation. I notice that, in my own case, when I am pricked sharply and I
flinch and yell, this behaviour is accompanied by pain. I am then supposed to
conclude that when others are pricked sharply and they flinch and yell, they
must be in pain too. Yes?
Finnucane: Uh huh.
Dentist: But one can’t justify the belief that others
have minds on the basis of such flimsy evidence. This inference is surely no
less suspect than the inference based on a single cherry. To infer that others
have minds on such grounds is wholly unwarranted. It’s irrational. Being The
Rational Dentist, I refuse to accept an irrational conclusion.
Scepticism about other minds
The dentist appears to be
right. I can’t directly observe what goes on in the mind of another, or even
that others have minds. So how might my belief in their existence be justified?
Only, it seems, by the argument from analogy. But the argument from analogy is,
in effect, a generalization based on a single observed case. So it’s just as
shaky as the inference based on the single cherry.
The conclusion to which I
seem forced, then, is that I am not
justified in believing that there are any minds other than my own. And if I am
not justified in believing there are minds other than my own, then presumably I
can’t be said to know that there are
minds other than my own, for presumably it is a condition of knowing that there
are other minds that I be justified in supposing my belief is true.
This is a sceptical conclusion: it says that I
don’t know what I might think I know. This particular form of scepticism –
scepticism about knowledge of other minds – has a long history. And of course,
like most sceptical conclusions, it’s highly perplexing, for it runs entirely
contrary to common sense. (You will find other forms of scepticism discussed in
other chapters: chapter XX “Brainsnatched” discusses scepticism about the
external world and chapter XX “Why Expect the Sun to Rise Tomorrow?” focuses on
scepticism about the unobserved.)
So the sceptic leaves me in
a paradoxical situation. On the one hand, it seems I have little if any reason
to suppose there are other minds. On the other hand, this conclusion is so
counter-intuitive that I suspect the sceptic must have gone wrong somewhere
along the way. The challenge I face, then, is to identify what, if anything, is
wrong with the sceptic’s argument.
[[TEXT BOX: THINKING
TOOLS: How not to respond to scepticism. People commonly make one of two
mistakes when presented with such seemingly compelling sceptical arguments.
First, they just dig in and dogmatically assert that
of course they know that their’s is not the only mind – it’s “just obvious”
that other minds exist. This is hardly an intelligent response, however. Sure,
we feel certain that there are other minds. But simply to appeal to such
feelings when presented with a sceptical argument is a mistake. What has previously
struck us as “just obvious” has in many cases turned out to be wrong. That the
Sun revolves about a stationary Earth, for example, was at one time considered
by almost everyone to be “just obvious”. Consider how irritatingly irrational
were those who continued brutely to insist that it is “just obvious” the Earth
is stationary even after they had been presented with powerful evidence to the
contrary. To similarly dismiss the sceptic’s argument would be no less
irritatingly irrational.
The second mistake is
blithely to accept the sceptic’s conclusion because one has underestimated its
strength. It can be tempting to say, “Yes, yes, I agree with you that I can’t
be certain that there are other
minds. I admit I don’t know they
exist. But still, it is pretty likely
that they exist, isn’t it?”
This is simply to
misunderstand the argument. The sceptic is not
arguing that, because there is room for doubt about the existence of other
minds, therefore one can’t know that they exist. That would be a rather feeble
argument, an argument based on the dubious assumption that one can’t be said to
know something unless it has been established beyond all doubt. The dentist’s
argument is much stronger. The dentist argues that not only is there room for doubt about the existence of
other minds, there is actually little if
any reason to suppose they exist. This is a much more dramatic conclusion,
a conclusion that few if any of us really accept. END OF TEXT BOX]
Is the dentist rational, or insane?
The
dentist leans over Finnucane again, his antiseptic-smelling breath fogging
Finnucane’s glasses. He starts to work the new amalgum filling into the hole he
has drilled in Finnucane’s molar.
Dentist: Perhaps you
would say, “But why, if you don’t believe I have a mind, do you go to all the
trouble of speaking to me, of administering anaesthetic, and so on?” The answer
is: because I find that if I administer anaesthetic my patients don’t moan and
thrash about. I use it to control behaviour. And I speak to them because I find
it enables me to have some control over their behaviour. And also because it
amuses me.
Finnucane raises his eyebrows.
Dentist: And of course,
it is possible that you have a mind.
I don’t deny that. So I give you the benefit of the doubt. I administer anaesthetic
just in case.
Finally,
after a few minutes, the filling is complete. Finnucane leans forward
groggily, cotton wool balls tumbling from his mouth. He spits a bloody gobbet
into the stainless steel tray. No longer at the dentist’s mercy, Finnucane finally
feels free to speak his mind.
Finnucane: Good grief. You’re not the
rational dentist. You’re the mad
dentist. Anyone who, like you, refuses to believe that others have minds, is,
frankly, ill!
Dentist: It’s true that I’m often accused of suffering from some sort of
mental illness. But my accusers are fools. For the truth is that I am merely
being rational. I believe what it is reasonable to believe. And what is wrong
with that?
Finnucane: You’re insane!
Dentist: It’s ironic, don’t you think, that you accuse me of being
insane, when I’m the rational one?
The dentist is a bizarre
character, frightening even[i].
We would find profoundly disturbing anyone who genuinely refused to believe
that others have minds. In fact, scepticism about other minds is, for anyone
not in the grip of some sort of mental illness, surely impossible to believe.
The kind of disengagement from others required permanently to maintain the view
that, for all you know, they are merely mindless automata is surely the
hallmark of a kind of insanity.
And yet, for all that, the
dentists’s seemingly “insane” sceptical position may be the rational position
to adopt. Perhaps he is right that we’re the “irrational” ones. The onus is
clearly on us to explain why belief in the existence of other minds is
justified.
Let’s
now take a look at two well-known attempts to solve this puzzle. The first
involves defending the argument from analogy.
1:
Defending the argument from analogy
In response to the sceptical
argument, you might point out that sometimes we are justified in generalizing on the basis of a single observed
instance.
Suppose I decide to take my
Kawazuki K1000 stereo apart to find out how it works.
[ILLUSTRATE: ME DISMANTLING
STEREO.]
I investigate its inner mechanism and establish how
everything functions. Wouldn’t I then be justified in concluding that all stereos of that make and model have
the same sort of internal mechanism? Surely I would. Yet this would be a generalization based on a single observed instance:
my own stereo. And if we are sometimes justified in generalizing on the basis
of a single observed case, then perhaps we are also justified in doing so when
it comes to other minds. In which case the argument from analogy is sound after
all.
This
is an interesting suggestion. But there are problems with it. True, it seems I
am justified in believing that all Kawazuki K1000 stereos have such-and-such an
internal mechanism on the basis of having opened up just one. But I am only
justified because I am in possession of considerable background information about such devices and their inner
workings. For example, I know that my Kawazuki K1000 stereo is a piece of
machinery mass-produced for profit. I know that it takes a considerable
investment in time and money to develop an inner mechanism of this sort. So I
know that the Kawazuki Corporation is hardly likely to have bothered developing
lots of different internal mechanisms to do the very same job. It’s because I
possess this sort of background information that I am justified in believing
that all the other Kawazuki K1000 stereos have the same sort of inner
mechanism.
However,
I am not warranted in generalizing on the
basis of a single observed case where such background information is missing.
For example, if, for all I knew, each Kawazuki K1000 stereo might just as
easily have been made, not by a single manufacturer, but by one of thousands of
entrants in a competition to come up with internal machinery that would make
these boxes marked “Kawazuki K1000” behave in just the way they do – raising
the volume when this knob is turned, changing the radio station when that
button is pressed, and so on – then of course I am no longer warranted in
supposing that the other boxes will contain the same internal machinery.
So the question
is: do I possess the kind of background information necessary to justify my
inference about the existence of other minds?
It seems not. In the stereo example, my inference
depends on my background knowledge about mass-produced machines and their
internal mechanisms. But in the case of other minds, I don’t appear to possess
this sort of background knowledge. For my
mind is radically unlike anything else I have ever experienced. For me to
conclude that, as I have a mind, so too must other humans is akin to me
entering a strange land, discovering that the first flower I examine contains a
fairy, and then concluding that so too must all the other flowers. What I
discover inside the first flower is so strange and unusual that no such
inference is warranted.
It seems, then, that I’m still not justified in
believing that there are minds other than my own.
2: The logical behaviourist approach
Here is a different kind of
solution to the puzzle of other minds, the solution offered by the logical behaviourist.
Consider the solubility of a
sugar cube. Solubility is what is known as a dispositional property – its possession by a sugar cube just
consists in the fact that if the cube
were placed in water under the right circumstances, then it would dissolve. Indeed, it’s true by definition that something is soluble just in case it is
disposed to dissolve in water, in just the same way that it is true by
definition that all stallions are male or that all triangles have three sides.
Now some philosophers have suggested that mental
properties are also dispositional properties. Indeed, some suggest that all
talk about minds and what goes on in them can be translated, without residue,
into talk about behavioural dispositions. This is the position of the logical
behaviourist.
Take
pain, for example. To say that someone is in pain just is, according to the logical behaviourist, to say that they
are physically disposed to behave in certain ways – to flinch, yell out, and so
on. It’s true by definition that those in pain are disposed to behave like
that. This is not something we need to discover.
Logical
behaviourism, if true, would neatly solve two classical philosophical problems
concerning the mind. First of all, it would explain how material objects, such
as our bodies, can possess minds. For an object to have a mind is just for it
to possess the right sort of behavioural dispositions. That’s all there is to
it. So we no longer have to make room for mysterious and ghostly extra
“somethings” – minds – in the world, in addition to physical
objects and their various physical dispositions. The “ghost in the machine”, to
borrow the behaviourist Gilbert Ryle’s (1900-1976) memorable phrase,
disappears.
The
other classical conundrum that would be solved is, of course, the one we have
been discussing here: the problem of explaining how we come by knowledge of the
existence of other minds. According to logical behaviourism, what makes the
problem of other minds seem so intractable is a certain mistaken conception of
what minds are like. If we think of the mind as the elusive “ghost in the
machine”, then we are immediately struck by the problem of explaining how we
establish the existence of this “ghost” in others. For all we can observe of
other human beings is their outward behaviour. But if Ryle is right, the mind
is not a peculiar ghostly “something” hidden
behind the outward behaviour. Rather, the mind just is a highly complex set of behavioural dispositions.
Just as there is nothing
particularly difficult about establishing what dispositional properties – such
as solubility – a sugar cube has, so, if Ryle is right, there is nothing
particularly difficult about establishing that human beings have minds. You
need only establish how they are disposed to behave, and that can be done quite
easily. Just as you can have good grounds for supposing that sugar cubes are
soluble, so you can have good grounds for supposing that others feel pain.
Attack of the zombies
Has the logical behaviourist
solved the problem of other minds? No. Unfortunately, logical behaviourism is
not a particularly plausible theory of the mind. Perhaps the most serious
difficulty with it is raised by the
conceptual possibility of zombies.
In the movies, zombies drool
and stumble about. The kind of zombies I have in mind are rather different:
their behaviour is exactly the same as that of a minded person. Philosophical
zombies, as I shall call them, behave perfectly normally. However, like movie
zombies, philosophical zombies have no minds: they are, to borrow the dentist’s
ugly phrase, “mere meat machines”.
[ILLUSTRATE: “PROUST” AND
“ZOMBIE PROUST”: BOTH SAY: “YOU KNOW: THESE LITTLE CAKES REMIND ME OF
SOMETHING”]
Imagine a world physically
exactly like this one but populated by zombies. This imaginary world even
contains even a zombie version of you: just like you physically, but all is
dark within. Of course, it’s not remotely likely that this zombie world
actually exists. But (and this is the key point) we can at least make sense of the possibility of such a
world.
Contrast the suggestion that
there might be a world that contain non-male stallions or a world that contains
triangles with four sides. These worlds don’t even make sense. For of course it
is a definitional truth that stallions are male and that triangles have only
three sides. Zombie world makes sense in the way that four-sided triangle world
and non-male stallion world don’t.
But here’s the problem for
logical behaviourism. If logical behaviourism is true, then it should no more
make sense to suggest that zombie world might exist than it does to suggest
that four-sided triangle world might exist. Just as it’s true by definition
that a triangle has three sides, so it is supposed by the logical behaviourist
to be true by definition that any creature that such-and-such behavioural
dispositions has a mind. Zombies, being creatures that lack minds but have the
same behavioural dispositions as ourselves, should be ruled out by definition.
But we have just seen that
zombies are not ruled out be
definition. But then it follows that logical behaviourism is false. And if
logical behaviourism is false, then it can’t be used to solve the puzzle of
other minds. The puzzle remains.
Conclusion
Most of us would say that Finnucane’s
dentist is irrational, insane even. But perhaps it is we who are irrational,
not the dentist. Can you rationally defend your belief that there are mind’s
other than your own?
I don’t yet see how.
What
to read next?
Chapter XX “Brain-snatched” and chapter XX “Why Expect
the Sun to Rise Tomorrow?” discuss other varieties of scepticism: scepticism
about the external world and scepticism about the unobserved.
Further
reading:
·
Anita Avramides, Other Minds (London: Routledge, 2001).
·
K. T. Maslin, An Introduction to the Philosophy of Mind (Cambridge: Polity,
2001), chpt. 8.
[i] In fact I have made
the dentist slightly scarier than a sceptic need be. But I have tried not to over do it. I didn’t want the dentist to appear
deliberately cruel and sadistic. After all, if the dentist clearly got some sort of perverse pleasure out of
inflicting pain on Finnucane, that would suggest he did after all believe
Finnucane had a mind worth torturing.
Comments
The argument from analogy cannot be dismissed so lightly for biological organisms. There is compelling molecular evidence (approaching virtual certainty) that all humans share common ancestry, and that all derive from a shared gene pool. We are not Kawazuki stereos made by different designers in a competition. At the DNA level there is a very high degree of similarity among all humans.
For other, more easily measured traits(eye color, structure of hemoglobin protein, susceptibility to Huntington's disease, etc.), similarities in phenotype can be correlated to similarities in genotype. (Environment plays a major role in development also, but we need not get sidetracked there for present purposes.)
Natural selection chooses genes for their ability to produce phenotypes that are useful in propagating those same genes to future generations. It is implausible that natural selection would have produced something as complicated as what I experience as my mind in a "one off" process, that my mind is so completely unique that no other human possesses anything remotely resembling my own experience of consciousness. I may have an exaggerated opinion of myself, but not that exaggerated.
For natural selection to have jumped from a hypothetical zombie to the mind and consciousness that I possess in a single leap -- to assume that none of my ancestors perceived the world in any way remotely similar to my own perceptions -- is not plausible from the standpoint of evolutionary biology.
Couldn't we also take the analogy the other way? Instead of inferring that all cherries have stones because we open one up, say we have a bowl of cherries. We eat one and it hurts our tooth. That's odd. We keep eating, and it seems every cherry hurts our tooth when we eat it. Come to the last one and we decide to open it up. Wouldn't the stone inside give us a probable cause of our tooth aches?
It is at that point the only thing inside of cherries we know of that could cause a hurt tooth. In the same way, a mind is the only thing we know of that can cause the sort of behavior we see in humans, based on our limited observation of our own minds paired with observations of tons of similar behavior.
I find that the zombie case is an extremely effective way of provoking students to think about the mind/body problem. Interestingly there is some empirical evidence which could also be used against logical behaviourism: scientists at Cambridge have found that they can communicate with apparently comatose patients by scanning their brains using an MRI scanner. The patient in one test was able to 'answer' simple questions by exciting regions of his brain. So there is some evidence here for a form of consciousness which isn't behaviourally detectable - at least not by any usual means. See http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8497148.stm
Instead of cherries, our politicians open up an issue, looking for a solution, and find one and assume that must be the only solution to this issue. Then, being internally focused due to the God Complex they assume this must be the only correct solution and there is no sense in tolerating any other suggestions.
This cannot be allowed to continue. We need to fully explore the problems afflicting our governments and we need to utilize online media to do so. In this way we could all contribute to a collective consciousness that can work towards the goal of finding beautiful solutions that will satisfy all sides of the debates. PicketProject's Blog
But isn't an analogy the statement that if the functioning of ensemble A engenders a set of properties A', then if B has the same structure as ensemble A, then the engendered set of properties B' will bear the same functional relationship to B, as A' does to A.
In this case, the ego A in his or her life has experienced pain; does not clearly remember the emergence of consciousness in childhood; remembers periods of unconsciousness called sleep; the activity of consciousness directs the actions of the body that maintains life. These interior experiences, this mind, we could call A.
When ego experienced A, he or she made cries and grimaces; conscious memories began some time after birth; consciousness returns after sleep; the manifold activities of the body sustain life. These we could call a set of properties of A, and call them A'.
When ego A see activities B', by analogy he or she infers B, another mind. Insofar as the notion of causality is a generalization, analogy too is a generalization. But in detail, isn't it a deduction from causality?
Incidentally, extensive background knowledge is always involved in thinking as near as I can tell. In this case, where the expeience of sleep provides a reason to question the existence of consciousness even against superficial appearances! Isn't the insistence on trying to imagine some sort of thinking that doesn't involve this is much like creating a straw man?
The analogical argument can also be attacked by the conceptual zombies, can't it? The thing about these kinds of arguments as near as I can tell is that there are those who believe you can take unsupported hypotheses as seriously as supported ones. That by saying you can imagine a way for a mindless organism to behave as if it had a mind, that therefore it is a reasonable proposition.
It is merely a logical possibility, only as probable as the evidence for the possibility of the hypothesis. Which is none. Whereas the analogical argument is not a weak form of simple generalization but a powerful argument from causality. I conclude the conceptual zombies are not sufficient to refute the existence of other minds.
That is, so long as you do not define proof as logical necessity.
And if the dentist were madly in love with Finnucaine, would that not also suggest he did after all believe that Finnucaine had a mind worth pleasing?
Does not the lover believe in the mind of the beloved? Moreover, isn't there a desire among lovers to meld into each others minds, even to become the beloved? I'm thinking here of the Schopenhauer influenced libretto of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, where during the great duet in Act II they sing of each actually becoming the other.
Perhaps the problem could be approached like this: there may be in fact only one mind/consciousness in the noumenal world, which in the phenomenal realm of space-time fragments itself into many contingent parcels of consciousness. Perhaps Eastern philosophy might have something to say along these lines.
I am not clear on what is meant by ‘mind’ in the first place, before even considering whether or not other people have minds in these arguments. It is assumed that we all know what we are referring to and are referring to the same thing, but I am not convinced that there is any one clear-cut thing that can be called mind.
I get the sense that most of these arguments aim to show whether or not you can tell if other people have minds similar to a person’s own mind, rather than if they have minds of some sort. How much does a person’s own experience of mind correspond to the experiences of mind of other people? Presumably there is a statistical average of sorts, a majority or norm within which the experience of mind is fairly uniform and involves similar content, processes and results. But does that account for all experiences of mind? If we consider the experiences of mind of people with neurological disorders or differences, mental illness, states of delirium, or simple differences such as synaesthesia, there seems to me to be much greater difficulty in assessing the likelihood of the existence of minds in other people based upon whether or not their behaviours or self-reports of internal experiences (or even PET or MRI scans) match what a person is familiar with as their own experience of mind. Is a consciousness and inner process that differs significantly from your own (or from a statistical norm,) still a mind?
If minds can differ quite markedly in their content, processes and end results, how do we even know what we are looking for in other people when trying to determine whether or not they also have minds? I’m not sure it is a particularly solid starting point to assume that all minds will be roughly the same and that we are looking for that one same thing in other people (before we even start looking at how we might be able to determine whether or not it is there or recognise it, if it is there.)
If there were many predicable behaviours/attributes (floats, is heavier, is more opaque in the centre, etc.) and the cherry exhibited all of them; it is surely more rational to believe that the cherry has a stone at the core than to remain sceptical for lack of direct evidence. It may be scientifically rigourous to remain sceptical but it would hardly be rational.
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