I am not sure I like your phrasing, but yes. Our faculties are the means by which we gain awareness, but faculties do not themselves perceive things and when we perceive things we are not perceiving faculties. We perceive with our sight, but we do not see our sight and our sight itself sees nothing. If that is the same as what you're saying, then yes. — Bartricks
The sensible faculties are through which awareness operates, — skyblack
but the faculties do not create awareness, — skyblack
Otherwise there is no reason not to "like" my phrasing, since it is precisely describing what's going on. — skyblack
My other question to you is about this "agency/agent" you mention, Is it the christian agent?. — skyblack
Why would it matter? — Bartricks
I said you're not a follower of Reason. I didn't say you weren't a follower. Again with the phrasing. — Bartricks
Because you haven't understood the workings of reason. Do you know how i can tell? By your statements. — skyblack
Had you known the workings of reason you would have understood that reason ultimately turns on itself, — skyblack
Not that it matters but do you know why i came to this thread? Because i felt bad so many were ganging up on you. I will leave you to observe how quickly you turned on me, in spite of your own advice to others about focusing on the OP rather than the person. — skyblack
Here is my argument for the truth of the first premise. Imagine some clouds form into shapes that appear to spell out "there's a pie in your the oven". Are you being told something? — Bartricks
But I think that can't be correct, for just imagine that putting the pie in the oven somehow did actually cause the clouds to form into those shapes. Imagine, if you like, that the steam coming out of your oven as the pie cooks is what forms into those shapes and that this wouldn't have happened had there been no pie in your oven. Well, it seems just as clear in this case that you did not acquire knowledge that there was a pie in your oven — Bartricks
That is, the pie was not using the clouds as a means of communicating its location to you. — Bartricks
It seems to me that what's preventing you from acquiring knowledge in this sort of case is that you have acquired a true belief from an 'apparent' representation, not a real one. — Bartricks
Really? This from someone who thinks you can reject an argument if the one making the argument is a Christian! You really sure you know about the workings of reason? — Bartricks
Really? What does that even mean? Is your degree (should you have one) in something with 'studies' in the title? — Bartricks
They fail in every case: that's what I'm arguing. That 'if' our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary processes - that is, if we just evolved them - then they never give us any real awareness of anything. — Bartricks
If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not provide us with any true awareness of anything (including that). As we are aware of some things, we are not wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces. — Bartricks
If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not give us an awareness of anything — Bartricks
Here is my argument for the truth of the first premise. Imagine some clouds form into shapes that appear to spell out "there's a pie in your the oven". Are you being told something? No. If unguided - by which I mean, unguided by any agency - natural forces produced those shapes in the sky, then it was not imparting information to you. It was just pure fluke that, to you, the clouds appeared to be trying to tell you something. They were not 'trying' to tell you anything, for they are not agents and so are not in the 'trying' business. — Bartricks
I am arguing that if our faculties are a product of unguided evolution, then they do 'not' provide us with any awareness of the pie in the oven. — Bartricks
I argued this by showing how the lack of agential guidance would mean that our situation is that of someone having an accurate dream about a pie. — Bartricks
I am somewhat puzzled, then, that you should ask me to show you the connection given that the entire OP is devoted to doing precisely that. — Bartricks
For as noted above, neither the note nor the inky markings are themselves doing any representing. — Bartricks
...but isn't that your premise? Nowhere have you shown blind natural forces in fact cannot produce agents.What if the note was the creation of blind natural forces and you just found it on the floor (so it was not being used by an agent to convey information to you, and nor have the squiggles been created by any agent)? — Bartricks
So okay - you don't understand the argument. What do you want me to do about it? I guess some people just can't get some points. — Bartricks
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.