Michael
They are evaluative predicates — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Yes, and this evaluation is inextricably tied up in the sensations they cause us to feel. — Michael
Corvus
Yes, I had never heard of Direct and Indirect Realism ten years ago. — RussellA
RussellA
Direct Realism does not claim to know what initiated the causal chain. That’s not a weakness of DR; it’s a basic feature of any sane theory of perception. — Esse Quam Videri
=================1 Direct Realism
Perceptual realism is the common sense view that tables, chairs and cups of coffee exist independently of perceivers. Direct realists also claim that it is with such objects that we directly engage.
2 Indirect Realism
The indirect realist agrees that the coffee cup exists independently of me. However, through perception I do not directly engage with this cup; there is a perceptual intermediary that comes between it and me.
Perception is not an inference from present effects to past causes; it is a current perceptual relation to an existing object.......................The object does not need to be known as initiator in order to be known as perceived......................The inference itself still depends on perceptual contact with something, and that perceptual contact is still not knowledge of causal initiation. — Esse Quam Videri
IR does not escape the alleged logical impossibility either — it simply relabels perception as inference, which only leads to a regress, as we’ve already identified. — Esse Quam Videri
Michael
It feels hot, but it isn’t — Esse Quam Videri
RussellA
Saying, you see a ship directly or indirectly sounds like, if there are any obstacles in the middle of the path of the seeing, rather than seeing the ship itself. It just sounds like it is a statement something unnecessarily confusing. You would only say that when asked - how do you see the ship? Was there anything between you and the ship, not blocking the view? — Corvus
Hanover
There are things we do, and then there are the actual things. Calling the voice on the phone "my wife's voice" is what's known as an **idealization (ironically). You are hearing something different to your wife's voice. You can just shift this to be listening to a recording of your wife's voice. There isn't even a tenuous connection, at the time, to your wife uttering anything. Your wife's voice is the vibrations in the surrounding air upon her larynx engaging and producing sounds.
The recording cannot be your wife's voice. It can be a recording of it. But that's unweildy, so we idealize to get through conversations more efficiently.
This is why philosophers routinely use different meanings for words - to make them more consistent and accurate. You don't have to accept my position, I'm just explaining why the move to forego sorting this out isn't attractive to me. — AmadeusD
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
Hanover
Sensations play a causal and evidential role in our evaluative practices, but meaning is fixed by public, world-directed norms of application, not by private feelings. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
As far as I know, DR is exactly the claim that they know what initiated the causal chain. — RussellA
For convenience, yellow circles can be named “Sun”, though it could be named anything. The word “Sun” then refers to not only i) perceived yellow circles but also ii) an unknown regularity in the world causing such perceptions. — RussellA
I don’t see where any regress comes in. — RussellA
Esse Quam Videri
This seems the crux of the problem, where cause is summoned to determine meaning. Cause can be admitted without attaching it to meaning. — Hanover
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
What I deny is that this shows that the word “hot” refers to a sensation, rather than that sensations make certain uses of the word “hot” true. — Esse Quam Videri
You are repeatedly sliding from the claim that sensations make certain reports true to the claim that sensations fix the meaning or reference of the predicates used in those reports. That inference is exactly what’s in dispute. Truth-makers are not meanings. — Esse Quam Videri
Corvus
When the IR says “I see the ship indirectly” the word “indirectly” is not referring to the space between the person and the ship but rather is referring to what is happening in the mind of the IR. — RussellA
Hanover
The sensation he has makes the use of the word “hot” true because it refers to the sensation he has, and the sensation he has makes the use of the word “cold” false because it refers to the sensation he doesn’t have. — Michael
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
1. John says "I feel hot" because John is hot
is not equivalent to
2. John says 'I feel hot' means John is hot. — Hanover
How could we know we've used the sentence "I feel hot" correctly if we have to rely upon an invisible private state? — Hanover
RussellA
Direct realism says: "the object perceived is the mind-external object itself, not an intermediary". It does not say: "perception includes knowledge that the object caused the perception". That is an extra thesis you keep tacking on. — Esse Quam Videri
Otherwise, the “unknown regularity” is doing all the work with no epistemic access—which collapses into skepticism or instrumentalism. — Esse Quam Videri
The inference to a “regularity in the world” must be answerable to something. That “something” cannot be the inferred regularity itself, or the bare perceptual appearances alone (since those are compatible with many worlds). — Esse Quam Videri
RussellA
Once the image you saw enters into your mind, shouldn't you then consult neurology or brain science in order to find out what is happening with the perceived image in your mind, rather than calling it Indirect Realism? — Corvus
Esse Quam Videri
Corvus
I don’t think that neurologists or brain scientists can currently observe thoughts in the mind.
At the moment it is up to philosophy. — RussellA
Hanover
I’m not asserting (2). I’m asserting (1) and that the word “hot” in John’s utterance “I feel hot” refers to the sensation he feels. — Michael
My private state isn’t invisible to me. I am intimately familiar with the sensations of feeling hot and cold. I can recognize and name which one I am feeling in any given environment — and even if I’m alone. — Michael
Esse Quam Videri
I'm not questioning whether you can introspect. I'm saying your introspection can't ground meaning. — Hanover
Michael
I was trying to figure out what words meant — Hanover
I'm saying your introspection can't ground meaning. — Hanover
RussellA
Philosophy is largely about semantics and logic. It doesn't deal with the cells, neurons and brain chemistry how it works with the entered images into it, does it? These are the subject for Neurology and brain science. — Corvus
Hanover
I'm talking about reference. The word "headache" refers to the sensation we tend to feel after a heavy night of drinking, the word "cold" refers to the sensation we tend to feel in low temperatures, the word "hot" refers to the sensation we tend to feel in high temperatures, and the word "pain" refers to the sensation we tend to feel if stabbed. This is so obvious that I don't get why there is so much objection. It's really not difficult to understand. You don't need to have access to another person's first-person phenomenal experiences to accept this. It's common sense, and in this case common sense is correct.
Sensations exist, and our words can refer to them — with the word "sensations" being the most obvious. — Michael
Michael
I'm not clear on what your objection is. — Hanover
Do you acknowledge that I can speak with you fully coherently by relying entirely upon the usage of the terms without having any idea what the consitution of the internal referent is? — Hanover
NOS4A2
You say that hearing this sound means that I am in direct contact with whatever is outside the room.
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