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We're discussing a way of characterizing the nature of the conscious experience that you presumably have, that a game of Tetris doesn't.By talking of a different "nature" you already place the discussion on dualist grounds.
>you have an experience of your existence that you can describe, because you're consciously aware of it.
Certainly. But the way Nagel phrases it, "the experience" becomes akin to a "thing", and the absence of this "thing" in physical nature becomes an argument for the hypothesis that it's highly unlikely (maybe even impossible) to give a physicalist account of consciousness. That is what I disagree with.
>There is, presumably, nothing it is like to be a Tetris game, because a Tetris game has no consciousness.
What does saying this get you over just saying "a Tetris game has no consciousness"?
>This is a standard, widely accepted characterization in consciousness studies. Even if you object to it, you should at least understand what it's saying.
I understand what it is saying only insofar as it is simply another way to say "consciousness". But it is clearly taken to be more than just an alternative phrase we can use in lieu of the words "consciousness" or "subjective experience" to vaguely gesture in the direction of these ill-defined concepts we are all familiar with. I disagree that "there is something it is like to be bondarchuk" has greater descriptory power than "bondarchuk is conscious", therefore I don't think we should draw any conclusions regarding consciousness from this phrasing, especially the conclusion Nagel draws which is that consciousness is highly likely to be non-physical or at least that our current understanding of "the physical" is insufficient to ever approach the problem of consciousness (because we can never hope to give proper account of "the something that it is like to be bondarchuk").
>And if you do object to it, the onus is on you to provide a better description, which I note you've declined to do on multiple occasions now.
Not really; my rejection of Nagel's argument can stand on its own regardless of whether I can offer an alternative argument.