Isn't the created world in your mind more prone to be illusive than the perceived world? — Corvus
My idea about the world is Evolutionary nature rather than either Physicalism or Idealism. I will think, build my points on that idea, and return to compare with your views. — Corvus
There is no such thing as the perceived world. A world, or the world, is something created by the mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
There are imagined world, perceived world and the world itself. If you are an idealist, you would be believing the perceived world as the real world? If you say, the world is created by your mind, I feel your world is likely to be very much in illusion. A perceived world sounds more accurate. — Corvus
But the problem is, how do you distinguish the model from the world? How can you, on the one hand, look at 'the model', and, on the other 'the real world'? That already assumes a perspective outside the model - that you're able to compare one with the other. But if your experience-of-the-world IS the model, and you're inside it, then how do you step outside it to compare it with the world itself? — Wayfarer
But the question we're considering is a question of a different order, because it concerns the nature of experience itself, not a specific question about a particular subject. That's what distinguishes it as a philosophical question, not a scientific one. — Wayfarer
The fact that contradictions exist to our model, show us that there is a model, or viewpoint of the world that we have, and something else that we have to model around. — Philosophim
To say we can know something outside of the very means we use to have knowledge, is impossible. — Philosophim
Physicalism and naturalism are the assumed consensus of modern culture, very much the product of the European Enlightenment with its emphasis on pragmatic science and instrumental reason. Accordingly this essay will go against the grain of the mainstream consensus and even against what many will presume to be common sense. — Wayfarer
The evidence of this reality is that the senses show us the sun rising and setting, when logic has demonstrated that in reality the earth is spinning. — Metaphysician Undercover
First of all, thank you for starting this thread and writing the OP as you have done. I was trying to get comments in this thread https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/14673/is-maths-embedded-in-the-universe-/p2Now picture the same scene — but from no point of view. Imagine that you are perceiving such a scence from every possible point within it, and also around it. Then also subtract from all these perspectives, any sense of temporal continuity — any sense of memory of the moment just past, and expectation of the one about to come. Having done that, describe the same scene. — Wayfarer
With this I disagree. I object to the cognitive disorientation and I object to the following comment as well:This gives rise to a kind of cognitive disorientation which underlies many current philosophical conundrums. — Wayfarer
What does that even mean?What the ancients, like Plato, demonstrated is that the senses deceive, and we ought to trust the mind with logic, over the senses, as capable of producing a more reliable and accurate "world". — Metaphysician Undercover
What I’m calling attention to is the tendency to take for granted the reality of the world as it appears to us, without taking into account the role the mind plays in its constitution. — Wayfarer
With the proverbial "heart". It seems to be perfectly possible to live a good life without any self-reflection or philosophical contemplation. You just "follow your heart".How does one perceive without logic? — L'éléphant
But the problem is, how do you distinguish the model from the world?
How can you, on the one hand, look at 'the model', and, on the other 'the real world'?
That already assumes a perspective outside the model - that you're able to compare one with the other.
But if your experience-of-the-world IS the model, and you're inside it, then how do you step outside it to compare it with the world itself? — Wayfarer
So if you propose a separation between the perceived world (world created by sensation), and a mind created world, the perceived world is demonstrably less accurate. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think Wayfarer's idea of extended naturalism does offer potential insights into how we co-create the reality we experience and how it might benefit us to realise the tentative nature of many of our positions. — Tom Storm
Can you list 3 ways in which it might benefit us, in real, daily-job terms? — baker
‘Ultimately, what we call “reality” is so deeply suffused with mind- and language-dependent structures that it is altogether impossible to make a neat distinction between those parts of our beliefs that reflect the world “in itself” and those parts of our beliefs that simply express “our conceptual contribution.” The very idea that our cognition should be nothing but a re-presentation of something mind-independent consequently has to be abandoned.’
- Dan Zahavi
thank you for starting this thread and writing the OP as you have done. — L'éléphant
Descartes, for one, never claimed that humans are being deceived. — L'éléphant
Can you list 3 ways in which it might benefit us, in real, daily-job terms? — baker
Mind must be unitary and transcend – be independent of – the world; — 180 Proof
what is implied is alien to individual minds which are immanent to – entangled with, inseparable from – the world; — 180 Proof
(3), though the world populated by individual minds (subjects) exists, only Mind is real – exists even when the world of individual minds (subjects) does not exist (i.e. before the world was created and after the world dissipates); — 180 Proof
I don't mean to be uselessly confrontational. It's that you're introducing conceptualizations from a philosophical-spiritual tradition in which formally joining a lineage of teachers and submitting to one in particular is essential. — baker
Hate to butt in but it wasn't logic that demonstrated it, so much as the empirical science of Kepler and Galileo et al. — Wayfarer
With our sense-perception, we can't help but view the world the way we do. Only the silly observers would not use the mind, the common sense, and logic to think about the world. How does one perceive without logic? — L'éléphant
So if you block out and disable all your senses, then what knowledge of the world would you get? — Corvus
I was not the one proposing the separation between mind produced world and sense produced world. To me, the world created by the mind, and the world created by sense perception are one and the same world. But we need to be aware of the cases where the senses mislead us. And I think your proposal to separate these two is not warranted. So the problem you present here with your question, is just an indication that your proposal is unacceptable. — Metaphysician Undercover
...it might benefit us to realise the tentative nature of many of our positions.
— Tom Storm
Can you list 3 ways in which it might benefit us, in real, daily-job terms?
For many people, "realizing the tentative nature of many of one's positions" amounts to plain old self-doubt and lack of confidence. Which are, of course, generally, bad and undesirable. — baker
To me, the world created by the mind, and the world created by sense perception are one and the same world. — Metaphysician Undercover
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