Yeah, er, I provided a defence of it in the OP. — Bartricks
1. If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not give us an awareness of anything — Bartricks
Note as well that I am not claiming evolutionary forces cannot have built our faculties, I am arguing that 'unguided' evolutionary forces cannot be responsible for them, for then they would not be representing anything to us.
"We cannot believe what our senses tell us about the world because it is not presented to us by an agent.
If we accepted that there is an agent that is purposely sending the information then we can believe it." — Sir2u
That's not a quote from me! That's not my view! — Bartricks
Perception denotes that which is involved in perceiving something. And you perceive something when you are subject to a certain kind of mental state known as a perceptual experience. This kind of mental state has 'representative contents' (though it is not the only kind that does) - that is, it represents something to be the case. And when that perceptual experience has been caused, non-waywardly, by its representative contents, then you are perceiving something. — Bartricks
What I am arguing, in case you didn't know, is that unless an agent has designed the faculty that created that experience in you, it won't have any representative contents at all and thus won't qualify as a perceptual experience (just something that is introspectively indiscernible from one). — Bartricks
Descartes argued that our faculties are designed by God and on that basis we can trust them. But that's not what I have argued, is it? — Bartricks
When it comes to a representative relation, what are the relata?
Well, there is normally going to be someone to whom the representation is being made. Let's call them the representee.
Then there is going to be the vehicle of representation. Let's call that the representation itself.
And then there is going to be the one doing the representing. Let's call them the representer.
The representer needs to be an agent. — Bartricks
Can there be desires without a desirer? No. Can there be thoughts without a thinker? No. Can there be precepts without a perceiver? No. Can there be representations without a representer? No. — Bartricks
And I illustrated with clear examples. Examples where a representer is absent, but everything else is in place. And bingo, no representation occurs. — Bartricks
You do realize you're trying to pass off the rehearsal of prejudices as reasoning.Can there be desires without a desirer? No. Can there be thoughts without a thinker? No. Can there be precepts without a perceiver? No. Can there be representations without a representer? No. — Bartricks
They're not 'word games'. Address the argument. — Bartricks
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