• quine
    119
    Sellars presents a formulation of sense-datum theory as follows:
    X looks red to S = There is a class of red sense-data which belong to X, and are sensed by S.

    This formulation is found in Sellars' Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind. How should we correctly formulate the formulation above in first-order logic? Or, how should we correctly symbolize that in first-order logic?
  • tom
    1.5k


    No idea how or why, but is the above correct? Shouldn't it be something like:

    X looks red to S = There is a class of red sense data that belongs to S

    or better

    X looks red to S = There is sense-data that belongs to S. S has a theory that the sense-data belongs to the class of red sense data. S attaches the label "red" to X.
  • quine
    119

    See section 9 in Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind. Sellars says '(X looks red to S) = There is a class of red sense-data which belong to X, and are sensed by S'.
  • Michael
    14k
    I think the claim is that if something looks red in the veridical case then it is red (i.e. the object itself has the property of being red). Therefore, if redness is sense-data then this sense-data is a property of the object itself.

    Although my understanding is just based on a brief skim of the paper.
  • tom
    1.5k
    See section 9 in Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind. Sellars says '(X looks red to S) = There is a class of red sense-data which belong to X, and are sensed by S'.quine

    My argument is not with you. I'm sure you are quoting correctly. It just seems obviously wrong.
  • tom
    1.5k
    I think the claim is that if something looks red in the veridical case then it is red (i.e. the object itself has the property of being red). Therefore, if redness is sense-data then this sense-data is a property of the object itself.Michael

    What colour is the dress?

    220px-The_Dress_%28viral_phenomenon%29.png
  • Michael
    14k
    I see white and gold, but I'm told that it's actually blue and black. As such, one might say that my experience isn't veridical.

    I'm not really sure the relevance of the question, though. I'm simply providing the reasoning. So if you have an issue, then it must be with one of the premises. Either redness isn't sense-data or looking red in the veridical case and being red are different things (in which case there's likely conflation on the term "red").
  • Efram
    46
    Just out of curiosity, could I ask why you wish to do this?

    I'm only loosely familiar with first-order logic so I could be mistaken here, but my first guess would be:

    If we approach this from the perspective that:

    - There are "sense data" belonging to X, which we will call set A.
    - There are "sense data" that S is capable of perceiving, which we call set B.

    Then we could say:

    xAB

    Which translates roughly to, "There exists some property x which belongs to A (i.e. is a sense-datum of X) and belongs to B (i.e. can be sensed by S)."

    It may be appropriate to replace B with a formula, but this may just be a matter of preference.

    Again, I would urge you to check this with someone else before basing any life decisions on it.

    As for the dress: The colour information stored in the image file is that of white and gold. Some people claim that their brains choose to reinterpret this as blue and black - and the originator claims that the dress was in fact blue and black.
  • tom
    1.5k
    The sense data is yours and not the dress's.
  • Michael
    14k
    The sense data is yours and not the dress's.tom

    Except we say that the dress really is blue and black even though I see it as white and gold. So is the blueness and the blackness that the dress really has sense-data? Or would you say that it doesn't make sense to talk about the "real" colour of the dress; only the colour we see it to be (in which case it doesn't make sense to distinguish between veridical and non-veridical colour experiences?)
  • Efram
    46
    The implication is that either a) the essence of the colour (the qualia, if you will) is stored in X (which I would personally disagree with) or b) some property of X is perceived as red by S. It feels like the first option is the one intended by the author.
  • Michael
    14k
    As for the dress: The colour information stored in the image file is that of white and gold. Some people claim that their brains choose to reinterpret this as blue and black.Efram

    That's interesting. The dress is actually blue and black, the colour in the image is actually gold and white (well, a bluish silver really), and some people see it as blue and black. The wrong colours in the image allow some people to recognise the real colours of the dress.
  • tom
    1.5k
    As for the dress: The colour information stored in the image file is that of white and gold. Some people claim that their brains choose to reinterpret this as blue and black.Efram

    No it's not. The image file is black and blue.

  • Michael
    14k


    Center of the neck
    gz2m11b1vtui2bs8.png

    Center of the left lapel
    a9tozvmzc2ds33o9.png
  • Michael
    14k
    The image file is black and bluetom

    So the black and blue sense-data is in the image file? Or is the black and blue in the image file not sense-data?
  • tom
    1.5k
    So the black and blue sense-data is in the image file?Michael

    OK, so the file is actually more brown and blue, which weirdly I am beginning to see. The image file contains binary data, so no, there is no sense data stored there, just numbers.
  • Michael
    14k
    The image file contains binary data, so no, there is no sense data stored there, just numbers.tom

    And what about in the dress (which is said to "really" be blue and black)?
  • quine
    119
    Hey,
    This thread is about correct formulation of sense-datum statements... Don't forget about it.
  • Efram
    46
    I didn't! See my first reply. ;)
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Except we say that the dress really is blue and black even though I see it as white and gold . . .Michael

    What I thought Tom was getting at is that it doesn't have anything to do with sense/sensing/etc. until it gets to you.
  • Michael
    14k
    What I thought Tom was getting at is that it doesn't have anything to do with sense/sensing/etc. until it gets to you.Terrapin Station

    Then I guess the "red" in "the dress is red" is different to the "red" in "the dress looks red", as the "red" in "the dress looks red" is sense-data but the "red" in "the dress is red" isn't? In which case the premise that looking red (even in the veridical case) and being red are the same thing is false?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    Right. I don't believe there's anyone who says that the red of a dress, say, is literally, identically in anyone's head. Thinking that anyone would be saying that seems like a weird, Aspie-ish misunderstanding of language.
  • Michael
    14k
    I haven't read enough of the paper to know what Sellars' thoughts are on the matter. But I doubt he picked the definition out of thin air. Presumably there are people (naive realists?) who in some sense think that the red of the dress is "like" red sense-data.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    I'm a naive realist, by the way. What I always point out is that naive realists are not saying that perceptions are not perceptions. And we're not saying that external stuff is perceptions.
  • Michael
    14k
    I'm not tied to the notion that naive realists believe this. I'm just suggesting that there are likely people who do. It seems like a perfectly understandable thing to believe prior to any in-depth scientific analysis.
  • quine
    119

    Set theory is a good treatment.
  • Efram
    46
    If you have or know of an alternative, I'd be interested to (eventually) hear it. At first I wondered if this was a homework assignment, but now I suspect you may already have some thoughts and just wanted to see others?
  • quine
    119

    This wasn't a homework assignment. I have tried something as follows:
    'The king of France looks red to Russell'
    = (∃x)(Fx & (∀y)(Fy → x = y) & (∃z)(Gzx & Hza))
    In set theory, I have tried:
    (∃x)(x ∈ A & x ∈ B)
    That's it.
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