Our fears and desires are isolating us as the only way to maintain something certain (by pulling back from the world); but we don’t need everything to meet the criteria of certainty. — Antony Nickles
Is anyone going to do a reading of VII? Or are we not done with VI. — Antony Nickles
I actually second the notion that it is important to understand Ayer’s idea of “perception” and not bring a preconceived notion to our reading... — Antony Nickles
...the point was that whether it is 'direct' or 'indirect' is a matter of looking at it from different perspectives, using different definitions of 'direct' and 'indirect'.
Hard to talk about something if there is nothing in the mind of the speaker. Before we began using terms like "perception", in order to pick stuff out of the world to the exclusion of all else, there was something to be named. Anything else is a complete fabrication of the mind. — creativesoul
Cats perceive mice despite having no idea what the term "mice" is. No notion of "perception" necessary for that to happen either. Our acquiring knowledge of that much is another matter altogether. — creativesoul
It also looks to me that you might have been reading Cavell? — Ludwig V
Yep.It is a fantasy-world question — Antony Nickles
Yes, there may have been too much presumption on our part that folk had an idea of what Logical Positivism entailed. Ideas of sense data and maybe also of emotivism are perhaps engrained in the thinking of our engineers, without their realising whence they came. But in addition there seems to be a dislike of critique generally. I don't find Austin's style sarcastic so much as droll.I actually second the notion that it is important to understand Ayer’s idea of “perception” — Antony Nickles
It now seems to me that you have not understood what Austin is doing. I suggest a re-read. — Banno
But "I am dreaming" has a use for those who have lucid dreams. The central critique aimed at Malcolm's account is, as I understand it, that he insists that dreams occur (at least in their quintessential form) when one is soundly asleep, a definition not accepted by others, especially dream researchers.we know how to use the words 'I am awake' but not the words 'I am dreaming'. — Richard B
The central critique aimed at Malcolm's account is, as I understand it, that he insists that dreams occur (at least in their quintessential form) when one is soundly asleep, a definition not accepted by others, especially dream researchers. — Banno
Yes, Ayer wants to use it as a basis for certainty on questions empirical, and it simply will not bear that weight.That is, the idea of direct, immediate experience doesn't do what (Ayer) thinks it does. — Ludwig V
Yes, I agree that this is his account - forgive my previous poor phrasing.The core of the argument is that to be asleep is to be unconscious, but to experience something is to be conscious, so the common sense of dreaming is self-contradictory. — Ludwig V
There is, as you point out, also REM and other evidence that show a great deal of activity during sleep. It looks as if something is happening. That seems to be why Malcolm's ideas are discounted.The only facts of the matter... — Ludwig V
The question arises, as it invariably does: what mediates perceptions — NOS4A2
It is possible that more than one way of thinking about things is valid, in one way or another. But surely some sort of selection will be needed sooner or later. — Ludwig V
Philosophy allows us to keep going beyond the limits of our knowledge, and it is one of the main disciplines of humankind. Yet, there will be big debates amongst all the philosophers and their theories to discern who is more right than the other. — javi2541997
But that doesn't mean anything goes, does it? — Ludwig V
But it still treats perceptions as if they were objects and as if those processes produced a final result, thus allowing Dennett to claim that consciousness is an illusion. What if perception is an activity? What if perceptions are no more objects than a magnetic field or a rainbow or an orbit or heat? BTW, none of those things are events, either. — Ludwig V
happy for others to move on, if you want to do VII. — Banno
That's the natural state of those with our inclinations.I tire of beating my head against the wall and talking to myself. — Antony Nickles
All processes are mediated or mediate. Perception can be validly understood as a process.
The nervous system is not a medium, though, because it is a part of that which senses—the perceiver—not that which the perceiver senses. I guess my next question is: where does the perceiver begin and end? I doubt appealing to biology can furnish an answer in favor of the indirectness of perception. Sound waves, for example, where the medium is air, contacts the sensitive biology of the ear directly, not indirectly. — NOS4A2
I don’t think it can be established that a perceiver is both perceiver and perceived. — NOS4A2
But if the medium, perceiver, is made to be the subject of our inquiry, then the thing perceived and the perception are incidental to the inquiry, and the silliness of this thread is avoided. — Metaphysician Undercover
The nervous system is not a medium, though, because it is a part of that which senses—the perceiver—not that which the perceiver senses. I guess my next question is: where does the perceiver begin and end? I doubt appealing to biology can furnish an answer in favor of the indirectness of perception. — NOS4A2
The problem I see is that there is no clear way of determining which philosophical theory is more right. — Janus
Anything that has no intellectual appeal to virtually anyone will not "go" to be sure. — Janus
There is, as you point out, also REM and other evidence that shows a great deal of activity during sleep. It looks as if something is happening. That seems to be why Malcolm's ideas are discounted. — Banno
Why not say they are dreaming? — Banno
I don’t mind someone else taking the lead either, — Antony Nickles
When it isn't a real duck but a hallucination, it may still be a real hallucination-as opposed, for instance, to a passing quirk of a vivid imagination. That is, we must have an answer to the question 'A real what?', if the question 'Real or not?' is to have a definite sense, to get any foothold. And perhaps we should also mention here another point that the question 'Real or not?' does not always come· up, can't always be raised. We do raise this question only when, to speak rather roughly, suspicion assails us-in some way or other things may be not what they seem; and we can raise this question only if there is a way, or ways in which things may be not what they seem. What alternative is there to being a 'real' after-image ? 'Real' is not... — Austin
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