In short, that's not what "philosophers have called qualia."
That would have a chance to be convincing if you stated an alternative account of what philosophers have called qualia. Saying "raw experience" leaves everything open, including the possibility that some internal aspects of the way we sense the world are raw experience.
As for science, if it makes you happy - or if it doesn't - I wish to revise my statement: understanding the reference of terms as well as possible requires doing empirical work. (Science is just the best way of doing that, not the only one.) That doesn't commit us to infinities, just to a non-vicious circularity, of the Neurath's Boat variety.
I can't compare my views on semantics to Yudkowsky's, because I doubt I read all the relevant sequence posts.
That doesn't commit us to infinities, just to a non-vicious circularity, of the Neurath's Boat variety.
Not my point. I'm saying whether actual infinities exist physically does not appear to be empirical (or else is resolved by empirical evidence we already have), and there are good rational grounds--endorsed by Yudkowsky, if I'm not mistaken--for rejecting actual infinities, grounds that already existed for the classical Greeks, who rejected the concept . The comparison was between the contention that qualia don't exist and the contention that absolute...