RussellA
RussellA
Light is of the mind-independent world; it is absorbed by the eyes; and therefore each of us has direct contact with the “mind-independent world”. Since this contact is direct, so is access to the “mind-independent world”, and there is zero room in space and time for any intermediary. — NOS4A2
RussellA
Surely what you are seeing is the image of the ship via telescope, not the ship itself? — Corvus
Michael
As far as I know light provides information about an object's composition, temperature, motion, shape, texture, or distance by revealing how it emits, absorbs, reflects, or refracts different wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum. We’re limited to visible light, but that proves to be good enough here on earth. — NOS4A2
No, I agree, looking at something through a cctv camera on a screen counts as viewing that something indirectly. I’m fine with that. — NOS4A2
Michael
It looked gold and white. — Banno
The case shows that colour concepts are not anchored in private experience, because private experience alone cannot sustain disagreement, correction, or explanation. — Banno
Michael
Now the question arises, if perception is a biological process continuous with others, why would it uniquely require a mental veil?
...
So, as naturalists we are committed to the idea that organisms are directly related to their environment through evolved biological processes. So, perception is how organism process light. — Richard B
Michael
There is ordinary language and philosophical language. — RussellA
Here is a kind of puzzle or paradox that several philosophers have stressed. On the one hand, existence questions seem hard. The philosophical question of whether there are abstract entities does not seem to admit of an easy or trivial answer. At the same time, there seem to be trivial arguments settling questions like this in the affirmative. Consider for instance the arguments, “2+2=4. So there is a number which, when added to 2, yields 4. This something is a number. So there are numbers”, and “Fido is a dog. So Fido has the property of being a dog. So there are properties.” How should one resolve this paradox? One response is: adopt fictionalism. The idea would be that in the philosophy room we do not speak fictionally, but ordinarily we do. So in the philosophy room, the question of the existence of abstract entities is hard; outside it, the question is easy. When, ordinarily, a speaker utters a sentence that semantically expresses a proposition that entails that there are numbers, what she says is accurate so long as according to the relevant fiction, there are numbers. But when she utters the same sentence in the philosophy room, she speaks literally and then what she asserts is something highly non-trivial.
flannel jesus
ordinary life we talk about ordinary objects as being coloured, but it's a fiction that we ought recognise in the philosophy (and science) room. Ordinary objects only reflect various wavelengths of light, which is something very different. — Michael
NOS4A2
So point to where in the light and the organism's body I can look to see this "information"? If I open up your head can I see the information you have about the object's composition?
Then your account is insufficient, because you said that we directly see an object if "our senses are in direct contact with the wavelengths in the light affording us information about those distant objects". This would entail that if we look at something through a CCTV camera on a screen then we are viewing that thing directly, which you admit we aren't. Therefore, direct perception isn't just "our senses being in direct contact with the wavelengths in the light that affords us information about those distant objects".
NOS4A2
I am in a room with the door closed, I hear a sound. I infer that the sound came from outside the room. I may be wrong, but I infer it.
In this case, is it the correct use of language to say “I have direct contact with what is outside the room”?
RussellA
No, but you would have direct contact with the medium through which the waves travelled, the air. The air comes from and is a feature of the mind-independent world. — NOS4A2
Michael
Why can't "that object is orange" mean the same thing as "that object reflects the wavelengths of light required for me to see it as orange"? — flannel jesus
Michael
You’re right. “Information” is a verb-to-noun derivation. There is no referent. If I was to be more precise (and careful) I’d say “The molecules in the air, the wavelengths in the light, the soundwaves in the water, come from the distant objects, informing us about those distant objects.” There is no need to go on multiplying entities, after all. — NOS4A2
My account is quite different. Here’s what I actually said:
“our senses are in direct contact with those mediums, whatever information they afford us, and those mediums are features of the environment. The molecules in the air, the wavelengths in the light, the soundwaves in the water, come from the distant objects, affording us information about those distant objects.” — NOS4A2
flannel jesus
But what does the word "orange" mean/refer to in the ending phrase "for me to see it as orange"? It refers to the phenomenal character of your first person experience and not a mind-independent property of the object. — Michael
AmadeusD
Don’t we deserve to understand what we are supposed to call “direct” when described as well. — Richard B
Perception is biological relation to the environment just like other bodily processes. The fact that errors, like illusion and hallucination, occur does not imply mediation by mental objects. — Richard B
AmadeusD
Light is of the mind-independent world; it is absorbed by the eyes; and therefore each of us has direct contact with the “mind-independent world”. Since this contact is direct, so is access to the “mind-independent world”, and there is zero room in space and time for any intermediary. That’s my whole point, basically. — NOS4A2
My understanding of the problem of perception is whether I can directly perceive the mind-independent world, or if I directly perceive some mind-dependent intermediary, like representations or sense-data — NOS4A2
Banno
You simply keep repeating this same error. No, they do not refer to "phenomenal qualities", because such "qualities" are never just "phenomena", they are always public.The words "gold" and "white" in the above sentence refer to the phenomenal quality of the experience that some people have when they look at the photo. — Michael
Michael
No, they do not refer to "phenomenal qualities", because such "qualities" are never just "phenomena", they are always public. — Banno
Your visor example has been adequately responded to, by myself and others. — Banno
Banno
My headache isn't public. — Michael
And. But yours is a much imporved argument. Indeed, it supports direct realism by showing that we routinely and intelligibly “see through” intermediaries without reifying them as perceptual objects. — Banno
In your visor world, the visors drop out of the discussion when folk talk about ships. They are not seeing the image on the screen, they are seeing ship. — Banno
Michael
I replied to your visor example here, here and here. — Banno
That's irrelevant. — Banno
If colour terms worked like headache reports, then disagreement, correction, and error about colour would be impossible. But as the dress demonstrates, plainly they aren’t. — Banno
Banno
Michael
Banno
Read that again, carefully.Two people can disagree about whether the bath is hot or cold. It does not then follow that the bath either "really is" hot or "really is" cold, and that one of them is wrong. The reality is that the bath causes one to feel hot and the other to feel cold, and the words "hot" and "cold" are referring to their private sensations. — Michael
Banno
Saying “the bath is hot” is world-directed. The word “hot” functions as a normative, public concept. What each person feels merely mediates access to that standard — it is not the referent. Again, if two people report opposite sensations, hot and cold, and if “hot” and “cold” referred to private sensations, disagreement would be impossible. The very notion of conflict about the bath would evaporate. But disagreement does occur. You again slide from “experience influences word use” to “words refer to experience.”Yes, so the words "hot" and "cold" refer to the sensations they feel (and even though they predicate them of the bath). — Michael
If it were not public, it would be as if you said "I have a headache" and I replied "No I don't!" — Banno
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