hypericin
The question is whether this "something" is an "object" or a "mode of access". — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
1. We only have indirect perception of distal objects
2. We have direct perception only of mental phenomena — Michael
magritte
You don't understand what a person is telling you if they say they're cold? Odd — frank
sime
Esse Quam Videri
Is this move invalidated if the visual experience is deemed a mode of access? — hypericin
hypericin
A "mode of presentation" cannot do that job. To say that phenomenal experience is a mode of presentation is to say that it characterizes the presentation of something else. This makes it derivative, non-intermediary and non-inferential. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Is there an example you can give of this kind of "mode of presentation"? A TV is a "mode of presentation" of something else. Yet it also fulfills all the criteria for indirect realism you outlined. — hypericin
hypericin
Seeing something as blurry or sharp, red or orange, looming or distant are not things you perceive first and then infer the object from. They are ways the object is given—features of the perceptual episode that can be thematized only upon reflection, not items that perception is directed at per se. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
hypericin
An inferential process does not by itself introduce an intermediary object of awareness; at least, not in the way required by indirect realism. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
You are claiming that, unlike the body, phenomenology lacks the capacity to fulfill the role that the body plays in my example? — hypericin
If there is an inferential process, there must be something upon which the inference is made. The precise characterization of the ontological status of phenomenology is difficult to resolve. But does indirect realism need to make this characterization? I say it only needs to claim that phenomenology has ontology, distinct from the distal object it stands in relationship to. And, that it can be attended to, distinctly from attendance to the object. — hypericin
Banno
I very explicitly said that John and Jane agree that the bath water is 37°C but disagree as to whether this 37°C water is hot or cold.
You seem to be intentionally engaging with a strawman. — Michael
hypericin
Indirect realism requires more than ontological distinctness and reflective attendability; it requires that phenomenology be what perception is of in the first instance, and that access to the world be achieved by way of it. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
No straw man - I was questioning why the topic came up... it is the fact of their disagreement that is salient. — Banno
Here are two propositions:
1. The 37°C water feels cold1
2. The 37°C water is cold2
My claim is that "cold1" refers to a sensation and that if (2) means anything it means the same thing as (1). — Michael
That John and Jane disagree as to the temperature of the bath is not a fiction; it's something to be explained. This is lost in your account. — Banno
Michael
To get (1), one needs the further premise that only phenomenally present items can be directly perceived. — Esse Quam Videri
Nichiren-123
I'm willing to be incorrect, but my understanding of indirect realism is not that visual (or auditory e.t.c.) experience is an illusion per se, but more that it is not the exact same as the object that is experienced. If I perceive a cat on my windowsill then that is a mental event that is completely separate from (although far from necessarily an inaccurate representation of) something real.One is then supposed to conclude (incorrectly) that the visual experience is an illusion.
AmadeusD
It’s interesting stuff, sure, but it is not sufficient to give me pause because humans have looked in the brain and have seen no images or anything that constructs images. — NOS4A2
If humans don’t see light why do we have lightbulbs? — NOS4A2
If I’m having hallucinations I’m going to get a second opinion — NOS4A2
While you and Michael claim there is the proverbial veil blocking us from direct access to the world, I say that the veil blocks your access to the goings on of your own brain. I say this for the simple reason that the senses point outward. — NOS4A2
Again, this is why we have sophisticated imaging contraptions, specialized doctors, and brains in jars: so that we can better understand what is occurring in there. — NOS4A2
claiming there exists things in the head that cannot be proven to exist, but because you believe you have a superior epistemological grasp of what is occurring behind your senses rather than in front of them. — NOS4A2
I do get the impression you both feel that scientific discoveries demand that we should accept the metaphysical picture that indirect realism seems to draw. — Richard B
As indirect realism retreats into private first person experiences, science needs to find consensus in the public realm. — Richard B
If hydration directly processes H2O, why can't we say perception directly processes light? — Richard B
You might say, we should keep "realism" and drop "direct/indirect" and understand we are causally embedded biological organisms whose process of perception supports interventions, coordinations, and manipulations of our environment. — Richard B
That is, if I speak falsetto, you can say that is not my "real" voice. If you want to say that my real voice is what you hear when we're next to each other talking, but a recording of my voice isn't my real voice, that's fine. But none of that suggests there is this metaphysically true voice that can be meaningfully (and by "meaningfully" I mean that can be identified and discussed coherently) identfied.
Identifying that "real" voice is impossible. Is it the vibrations, the way you hear it, the way your ear drum vibrates? Is it still "real" if through helium? — Hanover
But none of that suggests there is this metaphysically true voice that can be meaningfully (and by "meaningfully" I mean that can be identified and discussed coherently) identfied. — Hanover
Banno
Yes, it's pretty clear. You want to finesse the grammar of cold into cold₁ and cold₂, a contrast which is marked in by differentiating being cold from feeling cold. I would instead draw attention tot he fact of disagreement that makes making the contrast notable.I think I explained it quite clearly here: — Michael
If “X is cold₂” just means “X causes cold₁ sensations in me”, then:
*instruments don’t measure cold, only predict feelings
*disagreements are merely parallel reports
*learning temperature terms requires introspection
*correction becomes impossible except as etiquette
That is not how the language works, and it is not how science or ordinary life proceeds.
That is orthogonal to the earlier dispute. — Banno
Collapsing cold₁ and cold₂ renders "cold" impotent.If “hot”, “cold”, “painful”, “harmful”, etc. were mere fictions, then safety thresholds, medical advice, engineering tolerances and so on would all lose their point. Science would be answering questions no one had. That John and Jane disagree as to the temperature of the bath is not a fiction; it's something to be explained. This is lost in your account. — Banno
NOS4A2
Either you believe we literally take images into our heads from the outside, or we have absolutely, 100% without a shadow of a doubt, seen, in the brain, the infrastructure for creating mental images/representations. One of those needs to be true (but this doesn't determine an IR/DR perspective. It just is the two options available based on the fact that we aren't the images we 'see'). It would be helpful to know which you think is the case..
This is quite clearly incoherent: If we are veiled from the actions of our brain, we have no possible access to the outside world. We do not see things in our eyes - our eyes literally ships electrical signals to our brain. Without hte brain there is no possible mental image (or whatever you'd like to call it). Eyes (i.e the sense organ) objectively see/present nothing but "code" for lack of a better term. They do not contain or receive images. This much is an empirical truth and not part of the philosophical disagreement - which is why it seems to me you (and others) are not quite coming into contact with the facts prior to trying to determine some epistemic situation (there is a big spanner to this approach, but its not hard to overcome).
There are no "objects" in the head. That has never been claimed, so let's be clear: The images we see are there, whether or not you claim they are generated by the brain or not. If you're claiming they are not generated by the brain, you have a world of philosophy and neuroscience to battle against and an incredibly uphill battle it is, to explain how it is the apple on my table gets into my head(read: experience, i guess, noting hte empirical facts of perception).
Corvus
I'm willing to be incorrect, but my understanding of indirect realism is not that visual (or auditory e.t.c.) experience is an illusion per se, but more that it is not the exact same as the object that is experienced. If I perceive a cat on my windowsill then that is a mental event that is completely separate from (although far from necessarily an inaccurate representation of) something real. — Nichiren-123
jkop
..not that visual (or auditory e.t.c.) experience is an illusion per se, but more that it is not the exact same as the object that is experienced. — Nichiren-123
If I perceive a cat on my windowsill then that is a mental event that is completely separate from (although far from necessarily an inaccurate representation of) something real. — Nichiren-123
Corvus
For if we accept that Michael's verbal behaviour is the causal expression of Michael's stimulus-response conditioning, then Michael cannot be literally intepreted as having a false belief in relation to a universal truth. All that we can allege when alleging epistemic errors, is that a person's verbal behaviour was in violation of our lovely communication protocol. — sime
Esse Quam Videri
We now know both that ordinary objects are not phenomenally present and that the world is radically different to how it appears, hence indirect realism being the scientific view of perception. — Michael
Ludwig V
I'm afraid that philosophers are not immune from the temptation to coin descriptions of doctrines they disagree with that have a rhetorical effect on those who believe in them.This is why these traditional direct realists were naive colour realists. — Michael
How do we know that the world is radically different from how it appears? From our senses, that is, from the way the world appears to us.We now know both that ordinary objects are not phenomenally present and that the world is radically different to how it appears, hence indirect realism being the scientific view of perception. — Michael
Exactly. The idea that the world is actually different from the way it appears does not come from comparing it with anything, which is impossible.The perceiving is a mental event, but the cat is not. You see the cat, not a representation. — jkop
Well, there is behaviour as well.If one heard that statement, one can only conclude his/her body is feeling hot. That is all there is to it. — Corvus
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