And how, pray tell, did they reach into the vast immense space of possible hypotheses and premises, and pluck out this one specific set of premises which just so happens that if you accept it completely, it inevitably must result in the conclusion that we have something magical granting us qualia?
I suppose they have the ability to formulate arguments that support their views. Are you saying that the honest way to argue is to fling premises together at random and see what happens?
The begging was done while choosing the premises, not in one of the premises individually.
Joint implication by premsies is validity not petitio principi.
Premise: All Bob Chairs must have seventy three thousand legs exactly.
Premise: Things we call chairs are illusions unless they are Bob Chairs.
Premise: None of the things we call chairs have exactly seventy three thousand legs.
Therefore, all of the things we call chairs are illusions and do not exist.
That is an example of a True Scotsman fallacy, or argument by tendentious redefinition. I don’t see the parallel.
However, all they’ve done is pick specific premises that hide clever assumptions that logically must end up with their desired conclusion, without any reason in particular to believe that their premises make any sense. See the amateur logic I did in my edits of the grandparent.
It is very much assumed, by asserting the first, third and fourth premises, that qualia does not require brain interactions, as a prerequisite for positing the existence of p-zombies in the thought experiment.
I suppose they have the ability to formulate arguments that support their views. Are you saying that the honest way to argue is to fling premises together at random and see what happens?
Joint implication by premsies is validity not petitio principi.
That is an example of a True Scotsman fallacy, or argument by tendentious redefinition. I don’t see the parallel.
Eh. I’m bad at informal fallacies, apparently.
However, all they’ve done is pick specific premises that hide clever assumptions that logically must end up with their desired conclusion, without any reason in particular to believe that their premises make any sense. See the amateur logic I did in my edits of the grandparent.
It is very much assumed, by asserting the first, third and fourth premises, that qualia does not require brain interactions, as a prerequisite for positing the existence of p-zombies in the thought experiment.