The issue is what the word 'perception' means, and it means the organisation of sensory information by the brain, and therefore is brain function. — Kenosha Kid
In humans, reason is a major contributor to that organising ability — Wayfarer
Perception as brain function alone disregards the absolute necessity for causality of sensations, and at the same time, disregards the spatial distinction between the external cause and its internal effect. — Mww
If there are other sources of our experiences (and there are, not just dreams and hallucinations, but biases, errors, and features of processing), and those sources aren't separable after the fact (and they're not), then there's always an unknown about whether we're seeing an object, some feature of processing data about it, or something else entirely. — Kenosha Kid
So you end up close to Schopenhauer's take on perception. — frank
I'd just add that it doesn't then follow that we perceive images or, alternatively, respond to images. Instead we respond to things that we perceive, such as red flowers. — Andrew M
The ontological commitment seems to be that the proper object is the first outside of our body. We could just as easily say it's the first outside of our conscious awareness. — Isaac
I was going to say something else: the casting of everything as uncertain has a sort of methodological modesty about it — Srap Tasmaner
Perception as brain function alone disregards the absolute necessity for causality of sensations, and at the same time, disregards the spatial distinction between the external cause and its internal effect. — Mww
Do you think reason can be understood as a brain fuction? — Wayfarer
Naming a function in a process doesn't suggest there's nothing else in that process. — Kenosha Kid
I actually find the brain performing imaging much harder to wrap my head around than it performing reason. — Kenosha Kid
I actually find the brain performing imaging much harder to wrap my head around than it performing reason. — Kenosha Kid
No, it doesn’t. But it can suggest too much included in the process. — Mww
I used to visualize thinking as a two step process of low-level quantum combinations and selection from complex mental structures which is then followed at times by slow linear mature reasoning. — magritte
That's probably because you take it for granted. Naturalism tends to do that. Then it thinks it's 'explained' it. — Wayfarer
The call to commit to the objective reality of what you see is a mere leap of faith. — Kenosha Kid
2. All human errors stem from impatience, a premature breaking off of a methodical approach, an ostensible pinning down of an ostensible object. — Kafka, Zürau Aphorisms
The true commitment to reality involves actively eliminating possible causes of our observations, not just only considering one (falsificationism). — Kenosha Kid
what you're saying is that perception, as you understand it, is the end-to-end of the nervous system from stimulation of nerves through to awareness. — Kenosha Kid
Perhaps at some point "down the system" these things actually converge, in very primitive organisms but then they develop differently. The one thing that keeps coming to mind is that sense alone, is poor when compared to the intellect alone, in as much as we can separate them in actuality. — Manuel
I don't mind labels either as long as they are used in such a way that makes sense when parsed.I actually don't mind labels much. As in, you can be a total idealist and say that we create the world with our minds. Or you can be a metaphysical dualist. If the arguments are interesting and persuasive, that's what matters. I only dismiss "eliminitative materalism", because it's just very poor philosophy. — Manuel
I think that if you were actually paying attention then you'd know I'm neither of those, too. I'm an informationalist, or relationship/process philosopher. I'm trying to argue that your mind is an objective part if the world because it is information, or process, like everything else. You seem to be a naive realist if you think the world is composed of physical objects, like brains, instead of processes like minds, like the one you have direct access to right now and of which brains and other physical objects that you experience are models of other processes.Can't help you with that, Harry. Unlike you (seem to be), I'm neither a subjectivist nor a introspection illusionist. — 180 Proof
I just don't see how that could be. My point is that you can't have one without the other. What could you be intellectualizing about if you had no sense? What form does your intellectualizing take if not sensory data (qualia)‽ — Harry Hindu
[if] the world and mind are synonymous, then I don't see much use for the word, "mind", as there would only be a world and no mind and no we. Minds and we would simply be part if this strange world. — Harry Hindu
What is mathematics composed of if not the visual of black scribbles on white paper? If you're talking about what the scribbles represent, then I would still assume that you mean something real and observable, for if you didn't mathematics wouldn't be of much use.It's unclear is this example would hold, but perhaps mathematics. Or, consider the following thought experiment: suppose a baby is put in a complete sensory isolation chamber, it's not inconceivable to me that they would have internal self stimulation of some kind. Of course, I can't say if this would happen, but it's possible. — Manuel
What is mathematics composed of if not the visual of black scribbles on white paper? If you're talking about what the scribbles represent, then I would still assume that you mean something real and observable, for if you didn't mathematics wouldn't be of much use. — Harry Hindu
What is internal self stimulation and would the baby be considered "thinking" when in this state? If so, what OF? Does hallucinating and dreaming qualify as thinking? If anything this latter example is evidence that the brain needs sensory input to function properly enough for the entire organism to survive long enough to be meaningful. — Harry Hindu
I won’t disagree, but only ask: why should this be so? But that’s too much, too fast. What does it mean to take a leap of faith? Do you know what it means? How? Again, too much. We feel this compulsion to take such a leap, or feel we have already taken it and want to understand what we have done, or we feel that we should above all avoid taking any such leap and are worried that we may already have done so, without noticing. This is all worth thinking about, and I haven’t even gotten to the word “faith” yet, and there’s surely something to be said about that. — Srap Tasmaner
I don’t think we’re in a position yet to say what method can solve this problem — that before us is the possibility of a leap of faith and we are resistant, perhaps with good reason, to taking it. I don’t know how to solve such a problem. I don’t even understand why this is the problem we face, but it absolutely is. Before announcing how it is to be solved, I would spend some time trying to understand what sort of predicament this is, why it makes us uneasy, and see if we can learn, from the situation we are in, if it is possible to get out of it, and if it is, how. — Srap Tasmaner
No worries. It was fun anyway. — Mww
That something causes us to respond when seeing (what we call) a red flower is not in dispute. — Isaac
But here all we have is a causal chain, flower>conscious logging event. There's no reason why we shouldn't extend that chain - seed>flower>conscious logging event - are we now properly said to be conscious of the seed? Does that become the proper object of our perception because it is primary in the chain of events? — Isaac
why can I not say the proper object of the conscious logging event is the firing of the retinal ganglia? — Isaac
Unless the representation is the knowledge, in which case there is no unknowable.The representation becomes a presentation, in that case. — Goldyluck
I'm pretty sure that the sound of the cars outside is no illusion. — Goldyluck
So if I, instead of extending the chain, further dissemble it. Flower>retinal ganglia firing>conscious logging event, why can I not say the proper object of the conscious logging event is the firing of the retinal ganglia? We previously stopped the chain of causality at flower (not seed). — Isaac
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