Therefore, I cannot be directly perceiving the real, physical objects when I'm conscious. — Marchesk
when I'm conscious of driving, the content of my perception is a conscious experience, which is mental. I'm no longer directly perceiving the car on the road. Instead, I'm perceiving a world of feels, sounds, colors, smells, and so on. — Marchesk
I accept that direct realism is the case when perception is non-conscious. I'm driving down the road on autopilot. My hands, eyes and ears are directly perceiving the environment as I successfully navigate the car down the road.
However, when I'm conscious of driving, the content of my perception is a conscious experience, which is mental. I'm no longer directly perceiving the car on the road. Instead, I'm perceiving a world of feels, sounds, colors, smells, and so on. The phenomenal objects of my consciousness are made up these sensations. The road, the car, the wheel, the air and so on are not made up of colors, sounds, smells and so on. They are not phenomenal objects, but rather real, physical ones.
Therefore, I cannot be directly perceiving the real, physical objects when I'm conscious — Marchesk
What would it mean to directly perceive something? How would you perceive it? It seems to me that "perception" itself entails using real things (colors, shapes, feelings, etc.) to symbolize other real things (cars, roads, etc.), including other symbols (stop signs, red lights, etc.). The symbols are just as real as what they symbolize. Why would it matter if you get at the symbols or the real thing? Isn't the information what you need to get at - what those symbols symbolize (red apples mean ripe apples, black apples mean rotten apples)? Isn't it the information that is real and useful?Therefore, I cannot be directly perceiving the real, physical objects when I'm conscious. — Marchesk
However, when I'm conscious of driving, the content of my perception is a conscious experience, which is mental. I'm no longer directly perceiving the car on the road. Instead, I'm perceiving a world of feels, sounds, colors, smells, and so on. The phenomenal objects of my consciousness are made up these sensations. The road, the car, the wheel, the air and so on are not made up of colors, sounds, smells and so on. They are not phenomenal objects, but rather real, physical ones.
Therefore, I cannot be directly perceiving the real, physical objects when I'm conscious. — Marchesk
maybe that means that I kind of agree with you, or at least with this: perception is sometimes direct and sometimes indirect — jamalrob
It seems to me that "perception" itself entails using symbolism to symbolize other things, including other symbols. The symbols are just as real as what they symbolize. Why would it matter if you get at the symbols or the real thing? Isn't the information what you need to get at - what those symbols symbolize (red apples mean ripe apples, black apples mean rotten apples)? Isn't it the information that is real and useful? — Harry Hindu
I accept that direct realism is the case when perception is non-conscious. — Marchesk
That doesn't imply that I'm not a direct realist. Direct realists believe that we consciously perceive the world as it is, directly. — Terrapin Station
But we don't consciously perceive the world as it is. From science we know that it's not true. — Marchesk
The claim that you can know that it's not true presupposes that you can know the world as it is (via perceiving eyeballs, ears, nerves, brains, etc.) for comparison, where we can say which part is the world as it is and which is different from that. — Terrapin Station
We know that the scientific account of the world differs quite a bit from the world we perceive. — Marchesk
How would we know that? — Terrapin Station
Run some experiment, gather observations, come up with models to explain the experiments and observations. That sort of thing I would imagine. — Marchesk
Sure, and when you make those observations, do you perceive things as they are? — Terrapin Station
The scientist perceives the outcome of their experiments and observations, — Marchesk
Do they perceive them as they are or not. It's a yes or no question, or you can explain why you can't answer yes or no a la "It's not possible to answer that question yes or no because . . . " — Terrapin Station
Sure, so the premise is that we're not perceiving things as they are.No, they perceive things as they appear to human beings — Marchesk
So how do we know that one perception has things right? Namely, the perception that suggests that the other perception has things wrong? — Terrapin Station
We don't know for sure. — Marchesk
One thing we'd know for sure is that if we're going to claim that our perceptions do not tell us what the world is like, we can't use perceptions about what the world is like for support of that. — Terrapin Station
Kant, the pragmatists and the ancient skeptics would agree. Hume would agree at least about causation.
I don't think we have to go that far. We can just say that although perception doesn't show us the word as it is, it gives us enough information to infer what the world is probably like. But it takes a great deal of effort. — Marchesk
Take the totally naive view of vision. It seems like we're looking out onto the world through the eyes. But we know this can't be true. Light comes into the eyes. It's the opposite. — Marchesk
One of these days you'll say something I agree with. ;-) — Terrapin Station
Anyway, you are aware of your perceptions. So, what is this awareness, if not consciousness?I accept that direct realism is the case when perception is non-conscious. I'm driving down the road on autopilot. My hands, eyes and ears are directly perceiving the environment as I successfully navigate the car down the road. — Marchesk
Anyway, you are aware of your perceptions. So, what is this awareness, if not consciousness? — Number2018
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