And that question is another category error. It's a dream; it doesn't take place at all. It happens in the magical land of unicorns. — unenlightened
But you have an experience of seeing a tree in your dream. That experience is like the experience of perceiving a tree. — Marchesk
Start being strict with your language, and everything indirect will disappear, because it is all a series of category errors, and literalised metaphors. — unenlightened
It's not about being 'strict' with language, it's about using it in a particular way. You're trying to enforce a use of 'see' where it is not normally so restricted — Isaac
but if you make category errors you will fall into folly and indirect realism is a very venerable folly, that has deluded philosophers for a long time — unenlightened
I was hoping you could provide a few problems which arise from speaking the way you recommend against. — Isaac
This whole thread does that. And a deal of it happens in question form - "where is experience?" and so on. — unenlightened
Discussions like this on the forum rarely get off the ground because we individuate instances of perception differently, and people with intuitions that perception is model based have a habit of concluding that the representational varieties of indirect realism are the only way forward; even when the representation/modelling that constitutes perception itself is a direct relationship between body and environment — fdrake
The reason for the "venerable folly" of indirect realism is because illusions and hallucinations raise the possibility that perception isn't what we naively take it to be. — Marchesk
What would constitute indirect for a direct realist? Going back to the neural implant, let's say when you close your eyes the implant receives radio signals from a camera mounted on a robot moving about some environment. The implant translates that to electrical signals the brain can interpret as images, and the result is a visual perception of what the robot camera is recording. — Marchesk
Indirect realism is much more historically specific, and has its roots in specific ways of thinking about what it means to perceive, what it means to be a person at all. — jamalrob
I can't answer for direct realism generally. But I would say that an indirect instance of active perception would have its percept as an output of the process of active perception; as if the process of perception produces phenomenal and mental content associated with perceptions; in a diagram, perceptual relation->phenomenal and mental content of perception. I would say that a direct instance of active perception would have its percept as a component of the process of active perception; as if the phenomenal and mental content associated with perception is a part of the perceptual modelling relation between body and environment; in a diagram, phenomenal and mental content of perception ⊂⊂ perceptual relation. — fdrake
That's why I think that your approach (and unenlightened's approach, and jamalrob's approach) seem to sidestep the substance of the disagreement. — Michael
We want to know if the properties present in experience (a red colour, a sweet taste, a round shape) are (independent) properties of external world objects or if they're properties only of the experience (whatever it is that experience is). — Michael
That's why I think that your approach (and unenlightened's approach, and jamalrob's approach) seem to sidestep the substance of the disagreement. We want to know if the properties present in experience (a red colour, a sweet taste, a round shape) are (independent) properties of external world objects or if they're properties only of the experience (whatever it is that experience is). — Michael
We want to know if the properties present in experience (a red colour, a sweet taste, a round shape) are (independent) properties of external world objects or if they're properties only of the experience (whatever it is that experience is).
Don't give in to the thought: well then we can't say that fire engines really are red. Reject it. Banish it forever. — jamalrob
I dunno, maybe fdrake can explain things better. — jamalrob
Red things are red, but only to certain perceivers. — jamalrob
I meant to ask you when you made this distinction before; what do you see as the relationship between the apple properties and the red I see? — fdrake
What is the difference between your example of an implant and hearing someone speaking on the phone? Hearing them in person still requires air molecules as the medium for their voice to travel. We still hear their voice, and understand what they say. So again, what is being lost to say that indirect vs direct are somehow different? If hearing them in person is more direct than hearing them on the phone and hearing them on the phone is more indirect than hearing them in person, then we are simply talking about degrees of indirectness/directness. It would be the amount of causal steps it took to get to your awareness of it that we would talk about how direct and how indirect our knowledge of something is. How many steps qualify the process to be direct vs indirect? Does the process take more than one step? Are the steps themselves products of our mind?What would constitute indirect for a direct realist? Going back to the neural implant, let's say when you close your eyes the implant receives radio signals from a camera mounted on a robot moving about some environment. The implant translates that to electrical signals the brain can interpret as images, and the result is a visual perception of what the robot camera is recording.
The reason for brining that up is to ask whether any possible process of perception could be indirect for a direct realist. Because if the answer is none, then the direct realist is playing a word game. — Marchesk
Glad to see someone taking my point that the words we are discussing need to be defined, seriously. Everyone is talking past each other because we haven't defined "perception", "experience" "awareness", "consciousness", "indirect vs. direct", etc. No wonder the thread has become what it has - total confusion.(A) Perception is an active relationship between a body and its environment.
(B) Perception results from an active relationship between a body and its environment. — fdrake
Exactly! Our senses don't lie. Our interpretations of what we observe are the problem. A bent straw in water is exactly what you are suppose to see given that we see light, not objects. We infer objects from the information in light. The problem occurs if you think that you see objects.Yeah, but we were not wrong because we trusted our senses... but because we inferred things from them, that we had no real justification to infer.
There's no need for example to assume flat earth from the surface we see being mostly flat... because a circle with a big radius also looks flat from the perspective of a smaller being. Both flat earth and spherical earth fit that observational data, but we just assumed that it had to be flat for a time (for understandable reasons, but that is not the fault of the senses).
There is no way to verify what we perceive, with some other real world data... like I said earlier in the thread, we only started to make scientific progress when we started to take observations seriously. — ChatteringMonkey
What's wrong with the relational approach, that you and Marchesk might both be familiar with from other posts of mine, about colour realism and other things? Fire engines are red because they have properties that produce the experience of red in human beings, i.e., in perceivers that sense those properties in particular ways. Again, I think this shows how odd the question you're asking actually is.
Perceivers always have a perspective, in a general sense. That's what perceiving is.
Don't give in to the thought: in that case we can't say that fire engines really are red. Reject it. Banish it forever. — jamalrob
Exactly! Our senses don't lie. Our interpretations of what we observe are the problem. A bent straw in water is exactly what you are suppose to see given that we see light, not objects. — Harry Hindu
Our brains could have evolved to correct for that, if it had been advantageous enough. Our brains do corrections for lighting conditions, and of course sometimes our brains get angles, and lighting and motion wrong. Thus the various visual illusions.
The image on the retina is upside down and 2D, so the brain has to be making some inferences as it produces the perception. — Marchesk
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