omniscience is not required for knowledge. We need not know everything in order to know some things. Just because we do not see everything as it is does not mean that we cannot see anything as it is. — creativesoul
We do see things as they are - the sugar in the bowl, the tree in the garden. Sure, we don't see it all, but we do see enough to get by. — Banno
It's just a symbol that refers to that portion (and others such as its own) according to well-established rules. — bongo fury
So... to teach someone to draw in perspective, we write "Pick a vanishing point, draw lines from the foreground to the vanishing point. Lay your stuff on the lines." on the board, then we're good? They know the rule, so they can draw in perspective.It's just a symbol that refers to that portion (and others such as its own) according to well-established rules. — bongo fury
All of them and more compose what must be a unique reality, with many different facets. — Olivier5
the notion of the structure of the world.
-- Goodman — bongo fury
Ok. It's just that real maps really are objective accounts. — frank
But saying we don't see the world as it is isn't right, either. We do see things as they are - the sugar in the bowl, the tree in the garden. Sure, we don't see it all, but we do see enough to get by. — Banno
I experience, I call it the world; I don't call it having an experience.
— unenlightened
You call your experience the world? Are you a solipsist, then? — Luke
Looking at something with the mind does not mean to hold an image of it, it means to think about it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Regardless of how true your representation of the locations of those items is, your map is subjective, because you have chosen which items to map. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then looking is a misleading way to express, which is what I told you a while back. — unenlightened
But what happens if there are no individual perspectives going into the production of the map? — frank
IOW, if what we take to be individual perspectives are actually all cultural constructs? Is our map then also a purely cultural construct? What would the implications of that be? — frank
Right, but I think your personal objective narrative goes unexamined for bias. It's pinned as reality, right? — frank
EDIT:
I experience something, I call it the world; I don't call it having an experience.
Is that any clearer? — unenlightened
Thus I am wearing a red fleece today, "The fleece is red", not "my experience is red". — unenlightened
Yep, I think you hit the nail on the head. So ↪Olivier5 is quite happy to bring intersubjectivity in to the discussion, not noticing how it is used by, for comparison, ↪Pfhorrest, ↪simeonz and ↪Mww.
So there's folk as for various reasons don't differentiate between what is true and what is believed - they suppose for example that nothing is true, just believed to a greater or lesser extent. They've various epistemological structures to reinforce this view, versions of coherentism or pragmatism, sometimes rejecting truth outright, sometimes redefining it in terms of a sort of popular vote or a final goal.
I'd just point out that being popular or being useful is not the very same as being true. I hope that's apparent.
But also I've no objection to the suggestion that some experiment that is repeated successfully should reinforce one's belief in the result; that's not at issue here, at least for me. — Banno
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