How do hallucinations make use of light? When you claim to see a giant spider, where is this reflected light coming from that cause the brain to create an image of a giant spider? — Harry Hindu
If I'm looking at the wall, and hallucinating a giant spider on the wall, I am still seeing the wall, and making use of light to see the wall.
If we don't see light, then explain how we don't see anything (except the color black) when the lights are out? — Harry Hindu
Black is not a colour, so it is not the case that we see black, we see nothing. But seeing nothing, when there is an absence of light doesn't mean that we see light. What is the case is that we see objects, but we only see them if they are lit up with light. A laser could shine through the air in front of your eyes, and so long as air is perfectly clear, you wouldn't see it. If you look at the source of the laser light, you see it.
We are capable of hallucinating even when there are no lights, just as we can hear voices even when there are no sounds. When we are deprived of any sensory input for a length of time we begin to hallucinate and dreaming is simply hallucinating while sleeping. The images don't come from light. They come from our imagination and memories. — Harry Hindu
I know, but in these cases we aren't seeing, nor are we hearing. You don't see while you're dreaming, nor are you hearing when you imagine sounds. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is a very silly argument because light passes through glass just as it does through air or water. You say instead that there is an images projected on the surface of the glass. But our eye is not in physical contact with that surface, — John
I highly suspect that the people in this thread who are acting incredulous are just so utterly fooled by the illusion - having misinterpreted their perception of clear objects their entire lives - that the mere suggestion that one of their fundamental beliefs about the world (a lot of things are clear) may be wrong is too difficult to comprehend. They are stuck in their dogmatic ways, unwilling (or even worse, unable) to consider any other interpretation but their own, and lash out at anyone who suggests an alternative. A sort of defensive attack. — dukkha
I'm arguing against the idea that clear things are see-through. — dukkha
Right. And how are you defining "see-through" (also versus how you think that other people are defining "see-through")? — Terrapin Station
That it is the very same object which is being seen, window or not. It's the same road being seen whether a windscreen is fitted in ones car or not. — dukkha
What I was asking for, rather, is basically a definition of what "see-through" means. — Terrapin Station
Something "see-through" would be "see-through" even if you're not seeing an object through it, no? That is, imagine that we put a see-through object in a vacuum. Have the properties of the see-through object changed? —
Re what I was getting at about straw men, what is the difference, in your view, between "allowing light to travel through the object" and "having a property that enables seeing the object behind the transparent object"? — Terrapin Station
Or in other words, how do you believe that most folks believe that "having a property that enables seeing the object behind the transparent object" works? Do you believe that they believe something other than "the property is simply allowing light to travel through the object"? —
I don't know what you mean by "an image projected on the surface". My understanding is that, according to the physical understanding of seeing ( which is basically all we have to work with) there is no image projected anywhere, but rather light reflected off objects passes through the medium of air, any other transparent medium, or even a vacuum, and then passes through the transparent surface of the eye to fall upon the retina; where it stimulates rods and cones, and electro-chemical nerve impulses are then produced which travel via the optic nerve to stimulate the visual cortex, which produces the experience of seeing anything. — John
So we can discuss images on the surfaces of clear things without debating how this is *physically possible*, without arguing over the mechanism by which the image is displayed, because what we are seeing is NOT a physical object. It's internal, experiential, and produced by a physical brain. — dukkha
If there is no coherent physical account of how images could be "on the surfaces of things" then I can see no sense in asserting it or even arguing against it. — John
I don't know what you mean by saying that the things we see are not physical objects. They are physical objects by definition. — John
You seem to be suggesting that we see brain images instead, but that notion is unintelligible, because if there are no physical objects then there is no physical brain either. — John
If the lights were out, then could we see through the object? Does the quality that allows the object to interact with light the way it does, if light were in the environment, change when there is no light in the environment?You seem to think that "allowing light to travel through the object" is synonymous with "being able to see the objects behind the physically transparent object". — dukkha
This depends on what you mean by "know". Knowledge isn't the object, it is about the object. We know about objects by their representations. Knowledge itself is composed of sensory impressions.Firstly if all we know is representations of objects and not objects themselves then there is an unbridgeable gulf between the object and what is represented; the objects becomes infinitely distant from us. This leads to an inescapable radical skepticism. — John
You're missing something very important: Natural selection. Through the process of natural selection, more accurate interpretations of sensory impressions are favored over less accurate ones, which builds up exponentially to the detail and accuracy we humans experience with our sense of vision and other animals experience with their sense of hearing or smell.Secondly, the scientific analysis of perception that indirect/representational realism is based upon must be assumed to give us accurate information about the physical world or else indirect realism cannot be, and indeed no theory at all can be, justifiably based upon it. That the analysis of perception does give us accurate information about the physical world and its objects relies on the assumption that we perceive the physical world and its objects as they are. We have direct access to the world, in other words, and this is direct realism. The scientific analysis of perception, if it is believed to be accurate, can support only direct realism; if it is not believed to be accurate it can support nothing. — John
Firstly if all we know is representations of objects and not objects themselves then there is an unbridgeable gulf between the object and what is represented; the objects becomes infinitely distant from us. This leads to an inescapable radical skepticism. — John
Secondly, the scientific analysis of perception that indirect/representational realism is based upon must be assumed to give us accurate information about the physical world or else indirect realism cannot be, and indeed no theory at all can be, justifiably based upon it. That the analysis of perception does give us accurate information about the physical world and its objects relies on the assumption that we perceive the physical world and its objects as they are. We have direct access to the world, in other words, and this is direct realism. The scientific analysis of perception, if it is believed to be accurate, can support only direct realism; if it is not believed to be accurate it can support nothing. — John
If there is no coherent physical account of how images could be "on the surfaces of things" then I can see no sense in asserting it or even arguing against it. I don't know what you mean by saying that the things we see are not physical objects. They are physical objects by definition. — John
If the lights were out, then could we see through the object? Does the quality that allows the object to interact with light the way it does, if light were in the environment, change when there is no light in the environment? — Harry Hindu
The indirect realist believes/assumes his representations are accurate depictions of the external world. Your argument only works if you believe representations are not accurate. — dukkha
You seem to think that distorted means completely and utterly inaccurate. I see accuracy in degrees, not a simply black and white, accurate and inaccurate. I simply point to the fact that you are alive right now as evidence that you know enough truths about the world to not just survive in it but to procreate, communicate, make predictions, travel about, find things you've lost. You can function in this world for a long period of time. Try doing that without any knowledge or knowledge so distorted that there is no correlation between what you experience and what is out there. I point to the fact that we can communicate and understand each other even though we have never met each other and have different backgrounds as evidence that we both hear and see very similar things and engender very similar meanings from these written symbols.On the contrary, you're missing the very important point; that is if we do not have direct (meaning undistorted) access to the physical world via perception, then the theories of evolution and natural selection fare no better than the scientific theory of perception; they would also be based on distortions. — John
Only if there was a limited amount of light could you see anything. I'm talking about utter darkness. No light at all. Have you ever hear of the phrase, "it's so dark I cant see the hand in front of my face"? I'm talking about that dark.I'm not quite sure what you mean. If I'm understanding the question right, I would say that no, it being dark does not allow you to 'see-through' the object at the world behind it. In both the cases of it being light or dark, you would still be seeing an image on the surface of the clear object. You would just be seeing a really dark image on the surface of the clear object. — dukkha
You seem to think that "allowing light to travel through the object" is synonymous with "being able to see the objects behind the physically transparent object". — dukkha
I'm pretty sure they just see glass, and believe they're seeing the objects behind the glass. — dukkha
They're two different *kinds* of description, which belong in two separate domains (physics, and phenomenology). You appear to be conflating the two and muddling then up. — dukkha
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