Why attribute the least things possible to objects? — frank
you're actually missing the point of philosophy proper, — Wayfarer
Can't help you with that, Harry. Unlike you (seem to be), I'm neither a subjectivist nor a introspection illusionist.Tell me, 180: who in the world, or in all of history, has had a clearer understanding of what mind is and its relationship to brains, and how did they obtain this clearer understanding, so as I might understand why what someone else thinks about this relationship could be better than mine or anyone else's? — Harry Hindu
It's a cumbersome, disjointed view that divides the world into internal and external [...] — Banno
That which is accessible to a single person, i.e. private, is internal to the person in question; that which is accessible to everyone in principle, i.e. public, is external to all persons. — javra
That which is accessible to a single person, i.e. private, is internal to the person in question; that which is accessible to everyone in principle, i.e. public, is external to all persons. — javra
In the strict sense, it is not 'whiteness' that is in our mind, but 'the act of thinking of whiteness'. The connected ambiguity in the word 'idea'...also causes confusion here. In one sense of this word, namely the sense in which it denotes the object of an act of thought, whiteness is an 'idea'. Hence, if the ambiguity is not guarded against, we may come to think that whiteness is an 'idea' in the other sense, i.e. an act of thought; and thus we come to think that whiteness is mental. But in so thinking, we rob it of its essential quality of universality. One man's act of thought is necessarily a different thing from another man's; one man's act of thought at one time is necessarily a different thing from the same man's act of thought at another time. Hence, if 'whiteness' were the thought, as opposed to its object, no two different men could think of it, and no one man could think of it twice. That which many different thoughts of whiteness have in common is their object, and this object is different from all of them. Thus universals are not thoughts, though when known they are the objects of thoughts. — Bertrand Russell, The World of Universals
I see no problem with that as it stands. Issues arise when folk make attempts to talk about what is private., to treat it as if it were public. — Banno
Yeah, on second thoughts I'll leave that for some other time. — Wayfarer
Art shows rather than says. That's part of the value of art: that with it we see things that are difficult, if not impossible, to say. — Banno
That's why they are so damn hard to find out in the world, and why Plato was wrong.
But another thread...? — Banno
Out of fun, though, can you think of any awareness-endowed life that doesn't move toward what it find's favorable, hence good? If you can, than the good would not be cosmically applicable to all beings, hence would not be universal as Plato claimed. — javra
The obvious point is that either "favourable" is not the same as "good" - and that "hence" is misplaced; or you are using "favourable" and "good" for the exact same thing, and so saying what is good is hat is favourable achieves nothing but a change in wording. — Banno
I agree that we respond to things that we perceive (such as red flowers). But I was referring to KK's "image of 'red flower'". Where does that fit into the "perception" story, on your view?
— Andrew M
Well I can't speak for Kenosha Kid's understanding (although I just did in my post to you, so... oops), but I think we can justifiably use the term 'image' to describe what exits the visual cortex. We're already not a million miles away from being able to directly decode the neural signal leaving that area into an actual computer image. Much like I might say "I have an image of my house here on this USB stick" — Isaac
I think we all had the "does separating out experience from perception create a perceptual intermediary + invite the Cartesian theatre criticism" discussion before. Somewhere around page 30 here. Jack Cummins may find the discussion of the article in that thread's OP useful. — fdrake
And I don't see how you can say that with a straight face. — Srap Tasmaner
Just what I’d hoped. Would you agree the empirical occurrence, and the quality of it, as reported, belongs properly to the concept of sensation? — Mww
So does that mean that if there were a 1-to-1 mapping, we could *prove* not just what something is, but that it is? — Srap Tasmaner
The issue is what the word 'perception' means, and it means the organisation of sensory information by the brain, and therefore is brain function. I'm not seeing an argument that it occurs elsewhere. I think we can assume a common understanding of the sending of that information to the brain until we hit a counterexample. — Kenosha Kid
Eventually the attempt to understand oneself in evolutionary, naturalistic terms must bottom out in something that is grasped as valid in itself—something without which the evolutionary understanding would not be possible. Thought moves us beyond appearance to something that we cannot regard merely as a biologically based disposition, whose reliability we can determine on other grounds. It is not enough to be able to think that if there are logical truths, natural selection might very well have given me the capacity to recognize them. That cannot be my ground for trusting my reason, because even that thought implicitly relies on reason in a prior way. — Thomas Nagel, Mind and Cosmos (p. 81). Oxford University Press. Kindle Edition.
Fortunately the brain is pretty good about making hypotheses about continuity of identity and similarity — Kenosha Kid
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