Esse Quam Videri
RussellA
I mean something closer to this: when we make judgments, we are implicitly adopting standards of correctness (e.g. truth, evidence, coherence, reasonableness). — Esse Quam Videri
That is why judgments — not sensations — belong in the space of reasons. — Esse Quam Videri
Sensation constrains judgment, but it does not itself enter into justification or inference. — Esse Quam Videri
Michael
I would say that there is no relevant difference of the kind you are asking for — because the distinction I’m drawing is not about the material or biological status of the causal chain at all — but about the epistemic role it plays.
In ordinary perception — regardless of whether the eye is natural, transplanted, or artificially grown — one’s judgments are answerable to objects in a shared environment through ongoing interaction and correction... — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
The SDR says that they are directly cognizing the ship in the mind-external world, but if in the mind of the SDR there is no direct cognition of a weight of 10,000 tonnes, length of 200m, width of 25m and height of 30m, then what exactly is the SDR directly cognizing? The idea of a ship? — RussellA
Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
So why is this not also the case for the bionic eye? It simply replaces rod and cone cells with silicon. — Michael
Michael
If the bionic eye is integrated into perception such that judgments are still answerable to objects through ongoing interaction and correction — as with natural, transplanted, or lab-grown eyes — then there is no epistemic intermediary, and perception is direct in the sense I’m using.
The visor and nerve-stimulation cases differ because they interpose a surrogate whose adequacy depends on a generating process that stands in for the world, rather than being part of the perceptual relation itself. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
In veridical perception, that judgment is answerable to objects in the environment and can be corrected by further interaction with them. In hallucination, the same kind of judgment is made, but it fails—there is no object that satisfies it. No inner surrogate is thereby promoted to the status of what is assessed; rather, the judgment is simply false. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
You’re treating phenomenal character as that which is assessed for correctness in the act of perception — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
No, I'm saying that it's thing directly seen. From this we then make judgements about the world that can be correct or not. — Michael
Michael
I think that the distinction you're making here is more terminological than substantive — Esse Quam Videri
NOS4A2
Do you dispute that looks, sounds, smells, feels belong to the brain? That they are not found on the ship itself, but are properties of the brain, which are causally constrained by properties of the ship?
Michael
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
If you agree that phenomenal experience cannot be correct or incorrect, then the hypothesis that phenomenal experience is "what is directly seen" no longer explains error or motivates the skeptical worries you have presented. — Esse Quam Videri
My point has been that the direct object of perceptual judgments ("That's a ship") are objects in the world. Another way to say this is that perceptual judgments about objects in the world (ships), not phenomenal contents (redness as-seen, sourness as-tasted, etc). And this pretty much brings us full circle to where we landed a few posts back. — Esse Quam Videri
AmadeusD
Seeing the ship is unmediated... Seeing it through a telescope might be called unmediated. What we call a "ship" just is the sort of thing that we see. We don't see it "indirectly" in any ordinary sense. — Banno
I think the science clearly shows that colour, taste, smell, etc. are the product of our biology, causally determined by but very different to the objective nature (e.g. the chemical composition) of apples and ice creams. — Michael
mirroring between what’s in the mind and what’s in the world, but in a judgment’s being correct or incorrect depending on how things are — Esse Quam Videri
can be corrected by further interaction with them — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
The direct realist tries to avoid this by arguing that the sky appears blue because a) the sky is blue and b) the sky is directly present in experience. The indirect realist argues that this argument fails because (b) is false — Michael
And so we circle back to the example with the visors. The judgement "there is a ship" is a judgement about an object in the world, but it's still indirect perception. You seem to be conflating which things are the immediate objects of perception and which things our judgements are about. These are not the same thing. — Michael
AmadeusD
I've granted that "blueness" is not a property of the sky, yet I maintain that "the sky is blue" is true. This sounds like a contradiction, but I don't think it is. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
These seem to be the same thing? — AmadeusD
It is a contradiction in terms, but I understand the second to actually mean "The sky is blue, as far as the HUman perceptual system tends to present" and that is obviously true. — AmadeusD
Michael
I've granted that "blueness" is not a property of the sky, yet I maintain that "the sky is blue" is true. This sounds like a contradiction, but I don't think it is.
I would say that ordinary perceptual judgments like "the sky is blue" do not have to be interpreted in a naive way, but can be interpreted as something like "under normal viewing conditions, the sky systematically elicits blue-type visual responses in normal perceivers". This makes the claim objective, fallible, publicly assessable and non-projective. Nor does it require that the sky instantiate a phenomenal property as experienced. Many of the claims that people make ("the sun is rising", "that table is solid") can be cashed out in similar terms without resorting to naive realism. — Esse Quam Videri
It's not conflation, it's deflation. In the view I am defending, perception is cashed out entirely in terms of perceptual judgment, and perceptual judgments are about objects in the world. That’s not to deny that sensation causally mediates perception, only that it epistemically mediates it. — Esse Quam Videri
AmadeusD
A judgment is answerable to how things are not by resembling the world, but by being correct or incorrect depending on how things are; when true, what is affirmed is identical with what is the case, without any mediating, internal mental replica. — Esse Quam Videri
Where I disagree is with the further step that treats causal mediation as implying epistemic mediation by inner representations. That step isn’t delivered by science. — Esse Quam Videri
No, the claim is not just about how the human perceptual system presents things. It’s still a claim about the sky; namely the sky as it is in relation to the human perceptual system under normal conditions. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
But out of curiosity, would you make the same claims about shape and orientation (and other features of geometry) that you make above about colour? — Michael
Then I'll repeat what I said to Banno: I think the visor and its screen functions exactly like a Cartesian theatre (which is a strawman misrepresentation of indirect realism), and a Cartesian theatre is exactly the sort of thing that would qualify as indirect perception. So you've defined "direct realism" in such a way that even the strawman misrepresentation of indirect realism would count as direct realism. — Michael
Esse Quam Videri
This is a restatement of what I've said amount to the same thing? I can't see a response to what I've said there specifically. — AmadeusD
I'm not quite sure how you can make that claim: science tells us our mind cannot look at objects. Our eyes look at objects and our mind constructs images from sense-data. There is an unavoidable chasm between objects and our representations in this form. Can you explain what you mean in the above quote in light of this? — AmadeusD
They are the same thing. — AmadeusD
Michael
Colour is plausibly response-dependent in a way that shape and orientation are not. Ordinary claims about shape and orientation track relatively stable, mind-independent structural features of objects — and that’s why geometrical error correction, measurement, and intersubjective agreement work the way they do. — Esse Quam Videri
Calling my view “Cartesian” doesn’t address the issue I’ve been pressing. The Cartesian Theatre is defined by the presence of an epistemic surrogate whose adequacy must be evaluated. My whole point has been that once phenomenal experience is not truth-apt, treating it as the “immediate object of perception” does no epistemic work. If that move reclassifies the traditional taxonomy, so be it—but that’s a consequence of rejecting phenomenal-first assumptions, not a reductio. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
I'm not calling your view Cartesian. I'm saying that the scenario with the visor and the screen functions like a Cartesian Theatre. This would clearly be indirect perception even though their perceptual judgement "there is a ship" is about an object in the world.
So your claim that "perception is cashed out entirely in terms of perceptual judgment, and perceptual judgments are about objects in the world ... [therefore perception is direct]" is a non sequitur. — Michael
Michael
I would say that orientation is frame-relative in a way that shape is not. — Esse Quam Videri
Michael
The visor-and-screen case counts as indirect precisely because it introduces such a surrogate: the subject’s epistemic access runs through an internally generated stand-in whose adequacy must be assessed. That is not true in ordinary perception, even though both cases involve world-directed judgments. — Esse Quam Videri
I don’t think there’s a non sequitur here once my notion of “directness” is kept in view. — Esse Quam Videri
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