The example I gave was the surface of a table... — Janus
There is no need for me to deny that the Universe (or the table) is real independently of your mind or mine, or of any specific, individual mind. Put another way, it is empirically true that the Universe exists independently of any particular mind. But what we know of its existence is inextricably bound by and to the mind we have, and so, in that sense, reality is not straightforwardly objective. It is not solely constituted by objects and their relations. Reality has an inextricably mental aspect, which itself is never revealed in empirical analysis. — Wayfarer
By investing the objective domain with a mind-independent status, as if it exists independently of any mind, we absolutize it. — Wayfarer
Husserl believed all knowledge, all science, all rationality depended on conscious acts, acts which cannot be properly understood from within the natural outlook at all. Consciousness should not be viewed naturalistically as part of the world at all, since consciousness is precisely the reason why there was a world there for us in the first place. — Routledge Introduction to Phenomenology, p139
I think it's rather deeper than that, but I'll leave it at that. — Wayfarer
I thought you were asking me to speculate as to what the structures we perceive as objects might be.It seems animals will not conceptualize structures in the ways we do or even conceptualize them at all. Perhaps I don't understand your question.
I agreed with this bold part, and I thought this meant we agreed on there being real microphysical things in the world.
But then I got confused when you said:
"OK cool it seems we agree. I think we and the other animals have access to the same basic structures." — Manuel
But I don't deny the fact that there are real objects external to us. I will try one more time: — Wayfarer
So I'm not denying that there are objective facts (and therefore the existence of objects). What I said was
By investing the objective domain with a mind-independent status, as if it exists independently of any mind, we absolutize it.
— Wayfarer
And 'absolutizing it' amounts to metaphysical realism: — Wayfarer
Citations, please. — Wayfarer
I didn't mean to say that animals have conceptual access to microphysical structures, but that we know by observing their behavior that animals have perceptual access to the same things we do and if things are real microphysical structures then it follows that animals have perceptual access to microphysical structures, This does not mean that we or the animals have perceptual access to microphysical structures as microphysical structures but we both have access to them as macrophysical appearances. — Janus
f you agree there are external objects that are real independently of human perception and that their characteristics determine what we see — Janus
What their existence might be outside of any perspective is meaningless and unintelligible, as a matter of both fact and principle. — Wayfarer
But I don't see evidence that suggests they see the world in a similar way than we do, it seems to me based on what we know, they have very different experiences of the world - each subject to species-specific brain configuration. — Manuel
Those are not citations. They are your homespun truisms on realism. — Wayfarer
The meaning-worlds of different species are vastly different to our own. And for that matter, the meaning worlds of different cultures are vastly different to the meaning-world of this culture. But I don't agree that there is 'mind-independent substratum' behind all of those different meaning-worlds. — Wayfarer
As I said before we see cats climbing trees not brick walls, birds perching in trees, not stopping and attempting to perch in midair. We see dogs trying to open doors, we see crows using sticks as tools to retrieve food and getting out of the way of oncoming vehicles. We don't see animals trying to walk through walls or birds flying into trees. There are countless examples. I don't know what else to say other than to ask why you don't think the examples I give suggest that we see the same things animals do. — Janus
The other explanation is that this is all going on in a universal mind we and the animals are all connected to. I don't deny that possibility, but it seems to me by far the least plausible explanation. And it seems you don't want to even posit that, which makes your position seem to be completely lacking in explanatory potential. — Janus
And I keep replying that we are attributing walls, trees and brick walls to animals' cognition, WALLS, TREES and BRICK are concepts, not mind-independent things. — Manuel
I don't know what else to say other than to ask why you don't think the examples I give suggest that we see the same things animals do. — Janus
And I keep replying that we are attributing walls, trees and brick walls to animals' cognition, WALLS, TREES and BRICK are concepts, not mind-independent things. — Manuel
Dogs push (or pull) something, they don't know it's a door. Cats walk on something; they have no concept of a wall. — Manuel
Hey, that would require knowing the One Mind. And I don't claim to know the One Mind. I'm just tracking the footprints. — Wayfarer
I could go along with that. I always find the translation of 'On the Soul' as 'D'Anima' very suggestive of that - an 'animating principle. — Wayfarer
We will agree on the exact locations of the knots and the patterns, and we can confirm this by pointing to them. Now if there were nothing there determining the positions of those details on what basis could we explain our precise agreement? — Janus
You may be attributing that, not me. I say they clearly see the things we call walls and trees, I'm not saying they see them as walls or trees. — Janus
if you were to say that all animals observe the same reality — goremand
They see something. What properties they attribute to these things we do not know.
So, it doesn't make sense to say - even if you admit that they don't see them as wall or trees - that this thing they see is in fact (mind-independently) a wall or a tree. It's not a mind-independent fact for us that walls and trees exist. — Manuel
I don't think you understand what is being claimed. The argument is not that there is "nothing there", but that whatever it is that is there, may not be anything even similar to how it appears to us. — Metaphysician Undercover
seem to be real — Janus
The book’s argument begins with the British empiricists who raised our awareness of the fact that we have no direct contact with physical reality, but it is the mind that constructs the form and features of objects. It is shown that modern cognitive science brings this insight a step further by suggesting that shape and structure are not internal to objects, but arise in the observer. The author goes yet further by arguing that the meaningful connectedness between things — the hierarchical organization of all we perceive — is the result of the Gestalt nature of perception and thought, and exists only as a property of mind. These insights give the first glimmerings of a new way of seeing the cosmos: not as a mineral wasteland but a place inhabited by creatures. — Abstract
They very likely have some primitive concepts. I don't think it makes much sense to postulate a creature having perception absent some minimal amount of conception. — Manuel
Seems, being the key word. — Wayfarer
So the 'somethings' have roughly the same characteristics for the dog as they do for us. — Janus
My question is, do you not believe there is some component of the world/reality that, even if it is not captured in some particular concept, is still singular and shared across all these "constructed worlds"? — goremand
why are the use of concepts necessary for perception? — goremand
This in no way indicates that the word "dog" is in any way similar to the real thing pointed to. — Metaphysician Undercover
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