Either you're experiencing reality as-it-really-is, OR your experience is something subjective and crafted for you by your brain. — flannel jesus
orEither you're experiencing reality as-it-really-is or you do not experiencing reality as-it-really-is
Either your experience is something subjective and crafted for you by your brain or it is not something subjective and crafted for you by your brain
If you like, the model does not have to be perfect - "as-it-really-is" - only adequate. — Banno
Sniff but not smell? Eat but not taste?
See, hear, feel, smell and taste. Look, listen, touch... sniff and eat? — Banno
I don't think it's right to say you 'feel' the sandpaper itself, anyway. You feel it's impression on your nervous system, shunted through your nerves, into your brain where it is constructed into an experience. — AmadeusD
But you are importing a homunculus theory. Most obviously you are doing this by conflating mediation with indirectness, and this goes back to the same idea that reality could not be accurately mediated by sense organs. — Leontiskos
So, it only makes sense to say we feel the sandpaper, but feeling/sensation is indirect. — hypericin
In order to feel sandpaper:
The sandpaper must contact our skin.
The contact must register with sensory nerves.
The nervous signal must conduct to our brain.
Our brain must translate the nervous signal to sensation. — hypericin
- I don't believe that indirectness implies inaccuracy. — Leontiskos
It seems to me that your word here, "indirect," is being asked to do far too much work. — Leontiskos
Is that your theory, or is it something else? — Leontiskos
It's intended as an example; one might differentiate seeing the hand in the mirror as indirect, in contrast to seeing it without the mirror - directly. — Banno
My simple example above demonstrates that indirectness does not imply inaccuracy. — hypericin
Maybe so. "Indirect" describes the relationship between sensation and the world. Just like the number on the meter, sensation is correlated to features of the world, casually connected to features of the world, potentially accurate informationally. And yet, it is at a casual remove from what it measures, and completely unlike what it measures. — hypericin
We experience representations, not objects, in terms of sight. That seems inarguable, and therefore there is no way to pretend what we see is the object. No one but philosophers posit this, anyway, and so we can be fairly sure there's hide-the-ball going on. — AmadeusD
Nobody is saying that representation is the thing seen. Following language usage, objects are the things seen. But seeing is indirect. The only thing we experience directly is the representation. — hypericin
pparently knowledge of the sandpaper without fingers, nerves, and brain processing would be direct? — Leontiskos
I think with smell it's clearly the second one. I think the experience you have when you're smelling things is clearly not just experiencing reality as-it-is.
And then I think when that becomes an experience, that experience isn't just raw-reality-as-it-really-is, it's an experience concocted for you by your brain.
Consider a photovoltaic sensor. The number on the sensor can be quite accurate. It is mediated by the functioning device, and very much an indirect measure of the light falling on the sensor.
THe fiction is the particularly perniciious habit of ignoring the empirical facts when discussion perception. This has been ignored. — AmadeusD
What would constitute a direct physical interaction? — Count Timothy von Icarus
First, to echo Banno's question, what would the correlate to indirect, "direct," mean in the context of your claims? — Leontiskos
What would it take to directly see an object? — Luke
I'm afraid I still only have one clear answer: for perception to be "direct", naïve realism should be true. The features of our perceptions must be present in reality, so that barns really look red, and violins sound as they do, independently of an observer. But we all agree this is not the case.
Failing that, it seems we are talking about different things. You must be talking about something other than the relationship between perceptions and reality. — hypericin
How can the world possibly be perceived “independently of an observer”? — Luke
Naive realism requires that the qualitative features of perception mirror the features of reality sans perception. But they do not. They only exist during perception, and are features of the perceiver, not the perceived. — hypericin
But these qualitative features are exactly what we directly experience. — hypericin
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.