Michael
Michael
What we should not say is that we never saw Alcaraz defeat Djokovic, only ever images of Alcaraz defeating Djokovic. — Banno
In your example, the apple causes the pattern of light that is seen ten seconds later. Hence the apple is a constituent of the experience. — Banno
So, even if those objects are implicated in the causes of the experience, they also figure non-causally as essential constituents of it... Mere presence of a candidate object will not be sufficient for the perceiving of it, that is true, but its absence is sufficient for the non-occurrence of such an event. — Martin 2004
Michael
Are you saying that the apple is a constituent of the episode during the first 10 seconds? — Ludwig V
Michael
Moreover, this move overlooks the fact that there are other ways of cashing out what “direct” means that are neither dependent on the reification of consciousness nor reducible to deflationary semantics. — Esse Quam Videri
You are free to stipulate indirect realism in this purely negative way if you wish, but it’s unreasonable to expect others to adopt this stipulation given that indirect realism was traditionally a substantive, positive thesis about perception, rather than merely the rejection of one particular type of direct realism. — Esse Quam Videri
Strictly speaking, insofar as the apple has disintegrated, there is no direct object of perception during the second interval. — Esse Quam Videri
Michael
Very well, then how do we falsify indirect realism as you've defined it? — Hanover
The process of perception begins with an object in the real world, known as the distal stimulus or distal object. By means of light, sound, or another physical process, the object stimulates the body's sensory organs. These sensory organs transform the input energy into neural activity—a process called transduction. This raw pattern of neural activity is called the proximal stimulus. These neural signals are then transmitted to the brain and processed. The resulting mental re-creation of the distal stimulus is the percept.
To explain the process of perception, an example could be an ordinary shoe. The shoe itself is the distal stimulus. When light from the shoe enters a person's eye and stimulates the retina, that stimulation is the proximal stimulus. The image of the shoe reconstructed by the brain of the person is the percept. Another example could be a ringing telephone. The ringing of the phone is the distal stimulus. The sound stimulating a person's auditory receptors is the proximal stimulus. The brain's interpretation of this as the "ringing of a telephone" is the percept.
AmadeusD
I thought the selling point of IR is that it can explain error in perception where DR cannot. — Ludwig V
Well, we need to assess whether given indirect perceptions are veridical by some means that is independent of them. What do you suggest? — Ludwig V
There's no better way of knowing what's going there. — Ludwig V
I don't think there's any reasonable ground for doubt — Ludwig V
Banno
...and yet you saw the tennis. Thank you for such an apt example. The indirect realist is the one insisting that you never saw the tennis, only every pixels on a screen. For the rest of us, those pixels are part of watching the tennis. The causal chain is not the epistemic chain.The relevant issue is that when I see the tennis match on television I do not have direct perception of the tennis match. — Michael
This and your quote appear to be a constipated way of saying that one only sees the apple if there is an apple. Sure. At issue is whether one sees the apple or a "representation" of the apple. In your now well-beaten dead horse, one sees the apple as it was ten seconds ago. But somehow you conclude that one is therefore not seeing the apple. How that works escapes me.That the apple causes the experience isn't that it's a constituent of the experience. — Michael
Hanover
Very well, then how do we falsify indirect realism as you've defined it?
— Hanover
I don't know, and it's not how I've defined it. — Michael
Ludwig V
Why not? There is no relevant difference between the information carried by the light in the first ten seconds and the second ten seconds. The presence or absence of the apple when the light arrives is irrelevant. IMO.In the first interval, the act is fulfilled by the apple; in the second, it is not. — Esse Quam Videri
The destruction of the apple is too late to influence what has gone out; it cannot have any effect until tn seconds have elapsed, i.e. until the third ten seconds. You seem to think that the disappearance of the apple after the light has been sent on its way makes a difference to what is seen. But the apple was there when the light started its journey and so it carries the information that was accurate at the time of dispatch.That asymmetry is not captured by describing the light alone, and it’s precisely what distinguishes veridical perception from residual or empty intentionality. — Esse Quam Videri
I must have drafted something very badly. My position is that I only see objects that reflect or emit light. I don't know what it would be to see light as such - in transit, so to speak.Most direct realists say that we have direct visual perception of apples and trees and everything else that emits or reflects light into our eyes, whereas your account is that we only have direct visual perception of the light. Yours is a strange kind of direct realism. — Michael
If that's a good argument, then what's wrong with this?P1. If the apple is not a constituent of the experience during the second 10 seconds then it is not a constituent of the experience during the first 10 seconds
P2. The apple is not a constituent of the experience during the second 10 seconds
C1. Therefore, the apple is not a constituent of the experience during the first 10 seconds — Michael
Exactly. So you're admitting you're seeing light which presents the sun as it was eight minutes ago. I shall leave this there and just see if it lands. — AmadeusD
I had in mind the ordinary ways in which we realize we didn't see what we thought we saw. Which essentially means an inconsistency in the stream of perceptions that we experience. (This is a very rough sketch, because I expect you know what I'm talking about.) Philosophers tend to look for decisions on the spot. In real life, sometimes additional information comes in later or from a wider perspective.I think its patently clear that there is no way to assess error beyond error as a mathematical/statistical exercise or a purely practical one (trial and error, i guess) no matter which theory you prefer. The DRist, I think, wants to say that a mediated perception is direct enough to capture error. I just disagree. — AmadeusD
Not quite. I'm seeing light from the sun that carries information about it as it was eight minutes ago.So you're admitting you're seeing light which presents the sun as it was eight minutes ago — AmadeusD
Well, perhaps I over-stated the point. I can see the reason for doubt but don't think that it carries much weight.Which is batshit insane on the facts, to my mind. Not concluding error might be reasonable, but denying any reason for doubt is just... good god. Not sure i'm cut out for such a wild claim. The following doesn't help, because its entirely recursive. — AmadeusD
Richard B
This is clearly what indirect realism argues, as contrasted with their naive realist opponents, hence why it says here that "indirect perceptual realism is broadly equivalent to the scientific view of perception". — Michael
hypericin
Losing awareness of the object is not the same thing as phenomenology becoming the object of perception. It shows only that object-directedness can be bracketed or backgrounded, not that it was absent or secondary to begin with. — Esse Quam Videri
AmadeusD
I had in mind the ordinary ways in which we realize we didn't see what we thought we saw. — Ludwig V
I'm seeing light from the sun that carries information about it as it was eight minutes ago. — Ludwig V
...and yet you saw the tennis. Thank you for such an apt example. The indirect realist is the one insisting that you never saw the tennis, — Banno
Well, perhaps I over-stated the point. I can see the reason for doubt but don't think that it carries much weight. — Ludwig V
NOS4A2
I don't understand what you're trying to say.
Most direct realists say that we have direct visual perception of apples and trees and everything else that emits or reflects light into our eyes, whereas your account is that we only have direct visual perception of light. Yours is a strange kind of direct realism.
AmadeusD
AmadeusD
Hanover
The light itself is not sense data - the electrical impulses your eyes send to your brain is. This explains why light does not need a medium. It literally, physically, enters the eye. There is where the 'magic' happens. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
What is the light? Brightness? — Hanover
What is smell? Molecules in your nose receptors? Does the scent of the flower live in the molecule? — Hanover
Does the scent of the flower live in the molecule? — Hanover
Does it make sense to speak of anything that causes the magic except to say it causes the magic? — Hanover
So, what is the flower, the light, or the molecule I speak of? Let's say it's "really" a cat. Does that mean a flower is a cat? How can we know it's "really" a cat if I see flower, and how can I know you see a cat when I see a flower? — Hanover
How is it that we in fact speak easily of flowers all the time yet I have no idea what we're talking about here. — Hanover
The point here is that meaning isn't dictated by cause. It's by use. — Hanover
Hanover
You have fallen back onto the semantic argument, entirely missing the one being made here. What words we use are irrelevant to the question at hand, although it is quite important we at least think we're talking about hte same thing - and we aren't here. — AmadeusD
Because we're trying not to idealize. I have been over this. I am beginning to think that this argument is so thin that two of the better posters can't quite wrap themselves around it adequately. — AmadeusD
Which has precisely nothing to do with whether we are directly aware of objects or not. — AmadeusD
Esse Quam Videri
Yes, as I have tried to explain several times, e.g. with the distinction between phenomenological direct realism and semantic direct realism. It is possible that perception is direct1 but not direct2, where "direct1" and "direct2" mean different things. — Michael
Clearly something is happening during the second interval; I am having a visual experience with phenomenal character, described as "seeing a red apple 10m in front of me". If you don't want to say that qualia or sense data or mental phenomena are the "constituents" of this visual experience then I don't really understand what you think this visual experience is (are you an eliminative materialist?). — Michael
Esse Quam Videri
Why not? There is no relevant difference between the information carried by the light in the first ten seconds and the second ten seconds. The presence or absence of the apple when the light arrives is irrelevant. IMO. — Ludwig V
Esse Quam Videri
So, it does not seem that phenomenal experience is intrinsically object directed. It is only so when it is specifically an environmental cue. But there are phenomenal experiences such as music and imaginations that are not environment cues. These latter seem phenomenal on their own, without pointing to an object. And so, if phenomenal experience is able to float free of an object, it cannot be a secondary derivative of an object directed perceptual event, as you want to say. — hypericin
NOS4A2
hypericin
When I listen to music, I am still directed at something: sounds unfolding in time, with rhythm, pitch, and structure. Suspending concern with instruments or sources does not turn the experience into a free-floating phenomenal item. — Esse Quam Videri
Imagining is paradigmatically an experience as of something—just not something presently existing. In that case the object is "irreal", not absent altogether. — Esse Quam Videri
The question is not why organisms care about environmental cues, but why experiences are given as of something at all—why questions like “what is it?” arise from within experience itself. — Esse Quam Videri
Michael
The indirect realist is the one insisting that you never saw the tennis, only every pixels on a screen. — Banno
This and your quote appear to be a constipated way of saying that one only sees the apple if there is an apple. Sure. At issue is whether one sees the apple or a "representation" of the apple. In your now well-beaten dead horse, one sees the apple as it was ten seconds ago. But somehow you conclude that one is therefore not seeing the apple. How that works escapes me. — Banno
AmadeusD
Semantics references meaning. The words chosen, syntax. Are we not asking what I mean when I say "apple"? You say no. I say yes. — Hanover
You ask "what causes the sense data that causes my brain to swirl so I end up with an apple qualia." — Hanover
You want to know what the stuff is, but you can't provide it any attribute because attributes are qualia. — Hanover
The photon can't be brightness per your view, nor can the molecule have scent. That would be direct realism. — Hanover
No, that's not it at all. The emperor wears clothes. — Hanover
You act as if science answers metaphysics. Then is physics and metaphysics the same thing? — Hanover
Your desire to subtract semantics from "apple" — Hanover
that the Light is a data medium between the object and your eyes. That would be data derived from your sensual apparati (not a real word lol) - sense data”.
Yeah, sense-data is a mental thing. Light isn’t. Do you get it now? — NOS4A2
Michael
I must have drafted something very badly. My position is that I only see objects that reflect or emit light. I don't know what it would be to see light as such - in transit, so to speak. — Ludwig V
If that's a good argument, then what's wrong with this?
P1a. If the apple is a constituent of the experience during the first ten seconds, then it is a constituent of the experience during the second ten seconds.
P2a. The apple is a constituent of the experience during the first ten seconds.
C1a. Therefore, the apple is a constituent of the experience during the second ten seconds. — Ludwig V
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