What do you mean by "the same world"? This implies the flower is the same to me and the bee, but you've said otherwise. The question then is to describe those features of the flower that are the same regardless of the perceiver. — Hanover
For me, there's no "external world." — Ciceronianus
For me, there's no "external world." There's a world of which we're a part. There isn't one world for us and another world for everything else. We see red because we're a particular kind of living organism existing in the world which, when interacting with certain other constituents of the world, see them as having what we call a "red color." That takes place in one and the same world. It's a function of what the world is and what it encompasses. — Ciceronianus
What do you mean by "the same world"? This implies the flower is the same to me and the bee, but you've said otherwise. The question then is to describe those features of the flower that are the same regardless of the perceiver. — Hanover
The spirit of G E Moore is upon my shoulder. If there is no external world, then I'm not posting these words on PF. — Cuthbert
If there is no "external world", then human experiences are just part of the world's experiences. IE, all the attributes of the mind - pain, love, colour, consciousness, etc - are also attributes of the world. As consciousness is a human experience, then consciousness must also be an experience of the world. — RussellA
I'm not certain what you mean by this, — Ciceronianus
For me, there's no "external world." There's a world of which we're a part. There isn't one world for us and another world for everything else. — Ciceronianus
I think they're attributes of human beings, and so are part of the world in that sense, but don't know that it follows that they're attributes of the universe. — Ciceronianus
How? By holding up my two hands, and saying, as I make a certain gesture with the right hand, ‘Here is one hand’, and adding, as I make a certain gesture with the left, ‘and here is another’ (‘Proof of an External World’ 166)" https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/moore/ — Cuthbert
There must be an "external world" if pain, love, colour, consciousness, etc are attributes of human beings, yet not attributes of the universe. — RussellA
Bees perceived flowers differently to us.
Therefore flowers do not exist.
Something's missing. — Banno
The flower itself most certainly exists under this construct, but it's unknowable. — Hanover
What I'm arguing is that the approach of the OP is not naive (direct) realism. It sounds Kantian to me. Per the OP and subsequent clarifications there are said to be external objects and then there are perceptions. How the perception correlates to the external object is left to the unknown. It's being argued that bees have phenomenal states of flowers and people do as well, but they need not be at all similar. — Hanover
There are many constituents of the world. Some are human, some are bees, some are flowers. None of them exist in an "external world" apart from anything else. None of them is an "external object" in that sense. There is no "thing" called a perception which exists somewhere inside of us. — Ciceronianus
they (or any other parts of my body) exist "independently of my experience" if that's what he's saying — Ciceronianus
For me, there's no "external world." — Ciceronianus
Here's what I'm proposing, regardless of whether it comports with anyone's idea of naive realism or direct realism. — Ciceronianus
Are you saying there must be an "external world" unless the universe feels pain (for example)? — Ciceronianus
For me, there's no "external world." There's a world of which we're a part. There isn't one world for us and another world for everything else. We see red because we're a particular kind of living organism existing in the world which, [b[when interacting with certain other constituents of the world,[/b] see them as having what we call a "red color." That takes place in one and the same world. It's a function of what the world is and what it encompasses. — Ciceronianus
I mean simply that you (and me and everyone else) and the bee, and the flower, are parts of the same world--we all are parts of the universe. That doesn't mean that we're all the same. That doesn't mean we all have the same characteristics, nor does it mean our characteristics fluctuate. It means that we all interact, differently, but the interaction takes place in the universe; it's part of the universe. The exact characteristics of what we interact with is a matter of study, investigation, testing, and use. — Ciceronianus
:fire: :100:Here's what I'm proposing, regardless of whether it comports with anyone's idea of naive realism or direct realism. There are many constituents of the world. Some are human, some are bees, some are flowers. None of them exist in an "external world" apart from anything else. None of them is an "external object" in that sense. There is no "thing" called a perception which exists somewhere inside of us. — Ciceronianus
The world" cannot be "external" to – ontologically separate from – itself, which includes its constitutents (Spinoza). To wit: — 180 Proof
I'm just puzzled as to how you know that both bees and people perceive flowers, even if differently, and yet you also know that what flowers are is unknowable. — Banno
Then sketch out how it is appearances that deceive us.
— baker
Naive realism simply isnt backed up by recent research in perceptual psychology or the more sophisticated thinking in A.I. — unenlightened
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