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. — Ciceronianus
There is no "thing" called a perception which exists somewhere inside of us.
If I conceive a flower as X and you as Y, what is the truth value of the proposition "the flower is Y"? — Hanover
I tend to believe a causative link between the thing and the experience. — Hanover
Very well, what is the flower in and of itself? — Hanover
So, if the flower is knowable, it can only be knowable from an analysis of all perspectives, recognizing that each of our perspectives is mediated by our peculiar filters. This is precisely how we all navigate the world by the way. Science requires we eliminate subjective bias. — Hanover
I asked you to sketch out how "appearances deceive us". I've never felt "deceived" by an appearance, I don't know what that would be like. — baker
Trite, I know, but there is this:
External world: idealism, skepticism, or non-skeptical realism?
Accept or lean toward: non-skeptical realism 760 / 931 (81.6%)
Other 86 / 931 (9.2%)
Accept or lean toward: skepticism 45 / 931 (4.8%)
Accept or lean toward: idealism 40 / 931 (4.3%)
— PhilPapers Survey — Banno
This is Stoic doctrine, and we know you're a Stoic. Okay.
There is no "thing" called a perception which exists somewhere inside of us.
But this I don't understand.
Are you referring to Stoic epistemology, epistemology according to Stoicism? — baker
Not without a magnifying glass.See #21. — Hanover
This isn't the survey result that applies to the questions within this thread. — Hanover
One aspect of Direct Realism is that the external world exists independently of the mind. As you propose that there is no "external world", am I correct in thinking that your view is neither Naive Realism nor Direct Realism, but something else, such as Idealism, as Hanover suggests ? — RussellA
That comment is more along the lines of Austin, — Ciceronianus
He is addressing the question whether all his experience might be a mere figment of his imagination, including his own hands. — Cuthbert
If a "constituent" is a part, it is distinct from other parts, which logically demands that bees, flowers, and people are apart from each other. By "apart" I mean not a part of, which means it's separate from me, thus being external.
It is my experience that my perceptions cease upon my unconsciousness, yet it seems the object of my perception is unaffected by unconsciousness. Do you believe otherwise? When I sleep, does my bed cease to exist now that I no longer perceive it? — Hanover
You just like philosophers with the surname "Austin" — Banno
If we accept we're part of the universe along with everything else, how does the question whether there's an "external world" even arise? — Ciceronianus
Knowing this now, I say there is me, and then there are flowers and I have a perception of the flower. The question then is whether my perception represents the flower or is the flower. If the former, we're not direct realists. If the latter, we are. The latter makes no sense to me. — Hanover
It's easy to read that way if you're tacitly assuming a perception is an object that bears properties like a flower bears properties. — fdrake
In that view it is not that a perception is an object that bears properties like a flower bears properties, but that it is an object that bears properties instead of a flower that bears properties. — Janus
Words are multiplying unnecessarily here and causing you some confusion it seems. Your perception of the flower is neither a representation of the flower nor is it the flower. You perceive the flower, you don't perceive a representation of the flower. The flower is presented to your perception, is present in your perception, not represented by it. It is your thought or talk about the flower that represents the flower, if anything does. — Janus
There's a flower in your head and you're asking about the bee in your head. Idealism is strange, but not incoherent. — Hanover
I don't think our minds are separate from the world; I think they're parts of the world just as we are — Ciceronianus
So, the question "Is there an external world which exists independently of the mind?" seems to me to be...well, weird. — Ciceronianus
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