I guess I think it is distracting. Someone like Chalmers is unlikely to be convinced
Convinced of what? The only thing the paragraph you cited mentions is that (a) the hard problem concerns bridge hypotheses, and (b) the hard problem arises for minds (and not, say, squirrels or digestion) and is noticed by minds because minds type their subprocesses differently. Are those especially partisan or extreme statements? What would Chalmers’ alternatives to (a) or (b) be?
I bring up the hard problem here because it’s genuinely relevant. It’s a real problem, and it really is hard. It’s not a confusion, or if it is then it’s not obvious how best to dissolve it. If the framework I provide above helps philosophers and psychological theorists like Chalmers come up with new and better theories for how human consciousness relates to neural computations, so much the better.
Convinced of what? The only thing the paragraph you cited mentions is that (a) the hard problem concerns bridge hypotheses, and (b) the hard problem arises for minds (and not, say, squirrels or digestion) and is noticed by minds because minds type their subprocesses differently. Are those especially partisan or extreme statements? What would Chalmers’ alternatives to (a) or (b) be?
I bring up the hard problem here because it’s genuinely relevant. It’s a real problem, and it really is hard. It’s not a confusion, or if it is then it’s not obvious how best to dissolve it. If the framework I provide above helps philosophers and psychological theorists like Chalmers come up with new and better theories for how human consciousness relates to neural computations, so much the better.
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