how can we know that the external world "really is" as we see and hear and feel it to be? The indirect realist argues that we can't know this, because the quality of our experiences is determined not just by the external stimulus but also by our eyes and brain. — Michael
How can we know, therefore, that we "really" have eyes and brain? How can we know that we cannot know? How can we know that the telephone "really" works the way you claim it works? How does an indirect realist escape from global epistemological scepticism? — unenlightened
A direct realist is naive to think that shit smells — unenlightened
If we assume that we do have eyes and brains, — Michael
You have no way to assess how the construction of your own CNS compares to the source of the stimulus. — frank
Then why not assume we have trees? — unenlightened
It’s not naive to think that shit smells. It’s naive to think that shit having a smell (especially a bad smell) is a mind-independent fact that we “directly” perceive. — Michael
What is the source of your sophisticated indirect realism? — unenlightened
Is it not the naive assumption that there are brains and eyes and noses and internal and external worlds? — unenlightened
Yeah, but what Searle is suggesting is not what you are criticising. — Banno
When you understand that indirect realism undermines itself, as proposed in the op, and the problems of direct realism persist, the door to idealism will open within you. I'll be waiting for you at that door, which opens inward rather than outward. — Metaphysician Undercover
The fact that a colour blind person and I can both look at the same thing and yet see different colours. It therefore follows that at least one of us isn’t seeing the colours that the object “really” has. — Michael
Searle proposes the "intentionality of perception". — RussellA
The most common form of direct realism is Phenomenological Direct Realism (PDR). PDR is the theory that direct realism consists in unmediated awareness of the external object in the form of unmediated awareness of its relevant properties. I contrast this with Semantic Direct Realism (SDR), the theory that perceptual experience puts you in direct cognitive contact with external objects but does so without the unmediated awareness of the objects’ intrinsic properties invoked by PDR. PDR is what most understand by direct realism. My argument is that, under pressure from the arguments from illusion and hallucination, defenders of intentionalist theories, and even of relational theories, in fact retreat to SDR. I also argue briefly that the sense-datum theory is compatible with SDR and so nothing is gained by adopting either of the more fashionable theories.
Oh, that's news to me. I thought colour blind people couldn't see colours. — unenlightened
I think the question reduces to one of identity. Those who Identify as mind will be indirect realists, whereas those who identify as body will be direct realists. — unenlightened
This is the exact red herring that is almost always brought up in the debate between direct and indirect realism. — Michael
This is an example that shows the difference between how most people see things and how someone with red-green colour blindness sees things. — Michael
What do you mean by red herring ? — RussellA
The semantic realist argument related to intentionality doesn't address this issue at all. In response to the indirect realist arguing that when I talk to my parents on the phone, I don't hear their actual voices, I only hear the sounds made by the phone's speaker, the semantic realist argues that I'm talking to my parents, not to my phone. — Michael
That's a pretty picture; it looks to my dependent mind like a picture of some apples, with some kind of filter applied to one half. We direct realists may be naive, but we can tell the difference between a picture and an apple, and likewise between a filter and a red-green colourblind person.
Again, how do you know so much about other people's inner worlds when you don't even have access to the common outer world? — unenlightened
As it happens, I am short-sighted; it doesn't make me think the world is blurry until it gets with 30 cm of my face, it makes me think I cannot see as well as I'd like. — unenlightened
It is impossible to maintain both direct realism and our scientific understanding of the mechanics of perception and the world. — Michael
But, even more, surely we can be realists who are not scientific realists? That is, we may not infer that our scientific understandings are reality. — Moliere
Do you or do you not accept that some people are colour-blind; that the colours they see things to be are not the colours that you see things to be? If so then you accept that direct realism fails; it cannot be the case that both you and the colour blind person directly see the apple's "real" colour and that you see different colours. — Michael
I don't think I see the apple's colour, or the apple's shape, or the apple's surface; I think I see the apple, and I think the colourblind person sees exactly the same apple, and if you give the apple to Tommy the deaf dumb and blind kid, he will be able to feel and smell and taste the very same apple. — unenlightened
This is the intentionality argument for semantic direct realism, and has nothing to do with the phenomenological issue that is at the heart of the disagreement between direct and indirect realists. — Michael
You have no response to any of the questions put to you. You claim the high ground of objectivity but cannot explain how you overcome the subjectivity you project onto everyone else. — unenlightened
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