There is nothing left but space-time, elementary forces and elementary particles, along the lines of Neutral Monism and Panprotopsychism. Everything else exists in the mind, such as tables, mountains, apples, governments, morality, ethics and green trees.
"What is an event that is unperceived.................what does that even mean for space and time to be a placeholder for an event sans perceiver?"
— schopenhauer1
In conceptual terms, what is most widely accepted today is the giant-impact theory. It proposes that the Moon formed during a collision between the Earth and another small planet, about the size of Mars. The debris from this impact collected in an orbit around Earth to form the Moon.
In reductionist terms, there were changes to the elementary forces and elementary particles within space-time.
Wasn't this an event in space-time without a perceiver ? — RussellA
Ok, I'm stuck on this point because you seem to be incredibly wrong to me. I see some stars very far away. There is obviously an intermediary between my perception and the stars which I perceive. What is this intermediary, space, light, ether? How do you think that any of these proposals to account for the apparent separation between me and the stars, would be directly accessible to be perceived? I see each and every one of such proposals as a logical construct produced as a means to account for the intermediary. Don\t you? If I could see the thing between me and the stars, it would block my vision of the stars.
One reason philosophers in the past have rejected Direct Realism is because of The Argument from Illusion, which is obviously a strong argument. It is argued that the hallucination and veridical experience can be type identical, such that if an hallucination can only be explained by seeing sense data, then a veridical visual experience must also be explained by seeing sense data. — RussellA
However, he doesn't explain how one knows whether one's visual experience is an hallucination or a veridical visual experience, and if two visual experiences appear the same, such that we don't know which is an hallucination and which is veridical, then how do we know in which each sense "see" is being used. — RussellA
Yep.If you need that explaining you may want to seek professional help. — Isaac
You've mixed your intentionality with your causation. Knowing involves intentionality, rather than cause. That is, claiming to know something is adopting a certain intentional attitude towards that state of affairs: that this is true. So Isaac is right:One problem with Direct Realism is that it requires backwards causation, from perceiving a green tree to knowing that the cause of this perception was also a green tree. — RussellA
But there's nothing causal here. Not knowing whether A caused B has no bearing on the plausibility of an hypothesis that A causes B. — Isaac
Yep.We understand someone is hallucinating because others have "veridical experiences" and judge the one hallucinating is not acting normally. — Richard B
As Searle says in his conclusion, the core of the bad argument is to "...think that somehow or other, the experiences are themselves the object of the experiences". There is a sort of folding of the mind in on itself, so that the picture is of a homunculus attempting and failing to prove that there is a world "outside". — Banno
There is no mitigating factor or intermediary between perceiver and perceived, therefor the perception is not indirect. — NOS4A2
He does take this distinction as granted, as well as that the folk he is addressing can, at least for the most part, tell the difference. But I suppose that RussellA and @schopenhauer1 cannot tell if they are hallucinating gives us an explanation for why there is not much hope of "penetrating the darkness here". — Banno
There may be a tree, but is it the veridical access to the tree? — schopenhauer1
Usually.
What is risible is to suppose that one never sees the tree. — Banno
Reflected light is what the eye directly interacts with, not the tree. Only in this sense do we "only see" the reflected light. — hypericin
Pfff. — Banno
All philosophy is word play. — Banno
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