And why was he drawn to such a position? Because dreams are a great example of a cartesian theater in the brain. You can't simply export the movie to the external world as Dennett likes to do with perception. — Marchesk
You cannot do that if you limit yourself to talking about the referent of 'the red flower' only. The flower is well understood. My experience of it is not. — Kenosha Kid
I don't disagree about observing, but then I didn't speak about it. I am conscious of the representation. I am not conscious of building the representation. To that extent, then, the representation is presented to my consciousness, which is the humunculus you refer to. — Kenosha Kid
I'm comfortable with the fact that our models of reality will likely always be deficient and only ever be that: ever-improvong but never perfect models. — Kenosha Kid
a continuous channel of re-processing, imagined as stretching from "object" all the way in to... er, yes, how does it end? — bongo fury
If the external world is a hypothesis, however compelling, however confident in it we are, then statements about it are statements about our beliefs in it. — Kenosha Kid
continuous channel of re-processing, imagined as stretching from "object" all the way in to... er, yes, how does it end? — bongo fury
Different senses have different kinds of receptors, so what name covers them all, if not perception? — Mww
The problem is that proponents of "qualia" end up saying that we don't experience the flower at at, but that we experience only "quales" that represent it instead. — Janus
It also seems to me that philosophy has a problem tolerating useful words associated with outdated theories. "Sense data" being another example. Becoming apoplectic at its employment just means having to invent more crap terminology for data we receive via our senses, all because some stroky beard dipshit said incorrect things about it. — Kenosha Kid
So, you think we are better able to see (and I don't mean understand, but simply see) the world today than the ancients were, on account of our "better models"? I have a better model of a flower today than the ancients did, so I can see it more clearly? — Janus
The external world is not an "hypothesis" — Janus
No, you have a better model of a flower than you did when you were born, and so can see it more clearly. That's the correct analogy. — Kenosha Kid
:rofl: — Kenosha Kid
It's just that this topic becomes more controversial than it should be, in my opinion, in terms of doubting that we see colours or listen to music - in some obscure manner to be sure, it drives me crazy. — Manuel
Or we can say we mediate our presentations and say our perception is indirect, if direct perception is taken to mean that what we experience in everyday life, is what exists absent us. Which makes no sense. — Manuel
Are you seriously claiming that I can see a flower more clearly than I could when I was five years old, because that would be the implication of your 'ever-improving' model claim? — Janus
It is on the basis of the science of perception that we have come to see that this naive view is mistaken. On the other hand the naive view, for all practical purposes, is very close to our everyday experience, which probably explains why it is so hard to shake. — Janus
It's very, very strange. — Manuel
It also seems to me that philosophy has a problem tolerating useful words associated with outdated theories. "Sense data" being another example. Becoming apoplectic at its employment just means having to invent more crap terminology for data we receive via our senses, all because some stroky beard dipshit said incorrect things about it. — Kenosha Kid
In perceiving, we are directly and immediately aware of a sense datum.
This awareness occurs by a relation of direct mental acquaintance with a datum.
Sense data have the properties that they appear to have.
These properties are determinate; in vision, we experience determinate shapes, sizes, and colors.
Our awareness of such properties of sense data does not involve the affirmation or conception of any object beyond the datum.
These properties are known to us with certainty (and perhaps infallibly).
Sense data are private; a datum is apprehended by only one person.
Sense data are distinct from the act of sensing, or the act by which we are aware of them.
Different senses have different kinds of receptors, so what name covers them all, if not perception?
— Mww
Sensation? That doesn't seem right either. I don't think I know the word for it, but I'm pretty certain perception isn't it. — Kenosha Kid
I have a better model of a flower today than the ancients did, so I can see it more clearly? — Janus
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