Well, it depends on what's meant by awareness. A computer program could be said to be aware of its inputs. A simulation of perceptual awareness could be built into a robot.
That's different from having a conscious perception. — Marchesk
I have long been convinced of the pointlessness of the question 'Is perception 'really' direct or indirect?'; whether perception is thought to be direct or indirect is just a matter of perspective, or different ways of talking about the same thing, isn't it? — Janus
The brain is central to experience because it's the one component of the organism which is necessary for experience. — Marchesk
I didn't say perception wasn't veridical. I said it's not direct when we're conscious of a perception. — Marchesk
I mean it obviously wouldn't be veridical under the BIV or Matrix scenarios. — Janus
What would it mean to say that perception is veridical according to you? — Janus
is just the same as to say that it is thought to be direct or indirect depending on how we think about it, isn't it? — Janus
This is simply because effects are not the same as their causes. This would be the case for any being with senses. The effects: conscious experiences, will never be the things they are experiencing. It is nonsensical to even think that could be the case, and to even ask the question: "How can we see things as they really are?" It seems to me that the only way to observe how something truly is, is to BE that thing. You are your mind and you experience your mind as it truly is. I can only infer what is in your mind through your behavior. But this is simply because of how vision works. Our visual systems make models of how things are. We see things as objects when everything is process and information.But we don't consciously perceive the world as it is. From science we know that it's not true. — Marchesk
The effects: conscious experiences, will never be the things they are experiencing. It is nonsensical to even think that could be the case, and to even ask the question: "How can we see things as they really are?" — Harry Hindu
215. Here we see that the idea of 'agreement with reality' does not have any clear application. — Wittgenstein, On Certainty
Those scenarios were just meant to illustrate what an indirect realist means by being aware of a mental image instead of the physical object itself. And to lend credibility to the idea that it's the brain generated experience that we're aware of when having a conscious perception. Because the senses are performing the same roles as a vat in that they're stimulating the regions of the brain to have those experiences. — Marchesk
What would it mean to say that perception is veridical according to you? — Janus
Empirically verifiable, unless we start out knowing what is the case, such as with BIVs and Matrices. — Marchesk
Appealing to the BIV scenario doesn't help, because it assumes the independent existence of brains and vats, i.e. it assumes the existence of an extra-mental world. — Janus
I tried to make another point there in my post, but I think you missed it.If we can't perceive things as they really are, then direct realism is impossible, since realism is concerned with things as they are, not as they appear to us. But I take it you're an indirect realist. — Marchesk
The contents of your mind is part of how things are. Psychology and neurology are scientific fields attempting to get at those parts of how things are.That's a sort of Wittgensteinian or pragmatic position to take, but it's not realism, since realism is concerned with things as they are, not as they appear to us. — Marchesk
Is it? What is a conscious perception and how exactly does it differ from a robot's perceptions within it's own "brain"? All you see is a brain when you look at a human being. How do you know that mass of tissue contains conscious perceptions?Well, it depends on what's meant by awareness. A computer program could be said to be aware of its inputs. A simulation of perceptual awareness could be built into a robot.
That's different from having a conscious perception. — Marchesk
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