Our ordinary perceptions, and against these the seeing things indirectly through tinted glasses, distorting mirrors, telescopes, radar, periscopes and so on make sense. — Janus
Even though the same word "see" is used, these are not the same operations. We don't see our visual representations in the same way we see objects. Rather, we can choose to attend to the visual representation itself, instead of attending to the object it represents. — hypericin
For me, it's really simple: when I was a little kid, I thought I opened my eyes and there was just -the world-. Later, I learned that I open my eyes and light hits my retina and my retina sends signals to my brain and my brain does a whole lot of stuff and crafts my visual experience.But then I'd argue that the direct/indirect distinction is based on a false intuition about what a "direct" interaction could be. — Count Timothy von Icarus
This is answering the wrong question: "what is the relationship between the world and the organism's body?" This can be direct, or indirect, per your examples. But this is trivial.
And why does that mean the scientific understanding of perception is incorrect? I'm pretty sure the scientific understanding of perception is aware of these illusions, these distortions. — flannel jesus
Wouldn't the position of the indirect realist be that we can only "attend to" (or "see") visual representations and are unable to choose otherwise? That is, the indirect realist can only ever directly "experience" or "attend to" or "see" representations and can never directly see objects. — Luke
That is, the indirect realist can only ever directly "experience" or "attend to" or "see" representations and can never directly see objects.
— Luke
No, this is a misconception. We see objects, just indirectly. — hypericin
We can choose to attend to objects, or to their visual representation itself — hypericin
Indirect realists claim that we see objects indirectly because we can only see their visual representations. — Luke
You cannot attend either to objects or to their visual representation when you can only see their visual representation. — Luke
I agree.To trust it and base arguments on it, would on that assumption, be a performative contradiction. — Janus
I've said that if the assumption is that perception as such distorts reality then the scientific understanding of perception, which is based on perception, cannot be trusted. — Janus
Ok well the scientific understanding of perception is very aware of the illusions I mentioned, so does that mean science is inherently self refuting? — flannel jesus
I am at al loss here as I don't know what you are trying to say. — Janus
What about the other illusion i mentioned? The one that doesn't involve a physical change of light, and must only happen in the brain. — flannel jesus
you aren't just seeing raw reality as it is — flannel jesus
How would you know unless you sometimes see reality as it is? — jkop
All experiences are created by the brain — jkop
objects of perception exist outside the process — jkop
we know because we know that image isn't animated. — flannel jesus
The question, now, is not so much whether to be a direct realist, but how to be one. — SEP
Ok well the scientific understanding of perception is very aware of the illusions I mentioned, so does that mean science is inherently self refuting? — flannel jesus
All we know directly is perception, reality itself could potentially be anything. — hypericin
I don't see him claiming we have *no* access to the world, just no direct access. Indirection still allows access to empirical facts, just not absolute certainly about those facts: everything could always be a simulation, or whatnot. But absolute certainty is overrated. — hypericin
Sure, certainty is overrated; but hereabouts, even more so, doubt. — Banno
You are presently reading this sentence. An empirical fact? Call it what you will, it is... difficult... to see how it might be coherently doubted. — Banno
There's just two possibilities: absolute certainty, or the possibility of doubt. — hypericin
Indeed. So, don't.The point is not to seriously entertain these possibilities... — hypericin
First, to the indirect realist we see objects in the everyday sense. It's just that everyday seeing involves indirection. — hypericin
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