But here, of course, Ayer answers that, sometimes at least, there is real 'disagreement about the nature of the empirical facts'. But what kind of disagreement can this be?
If dreams were not 'qualitatively' different from waking experiences, then every waking experience would be like a dream; the dream-like quality would be, not difficult to capture, but impossible to avoid. It is true, to repeat, that dreams are na"ated in the same terms as waking experiences: these terms, after all, are the best terms we have; but it would be wildly wrong to conclude from this that what is narrated in the two cases is exactly alike. When we are hit on the head we sometimes say that we 'see stars'; but for all that, seeing stars when you are hit on the head is not 'qualitatively' indistinguishable from seeing stars when you look at the sky
Austin is simply investigating Ayer's creation of the distinction in dismantling the whole framework of direct/indirect as well as "perception". — Antony Nickles
In the case of the camouflaged church what we see is not, as Austin claims, "a church that now looks like a barn". (30) What we see is a barn. If we didn't what would be the point of camouflaging it? — Fooloso4
These are not easy issues to work through. One thing that might help is remembering that sight is not the only sense, and that an account of how we perceive must wok as well for touch and smell as for vision.I myself, cannot quite understand how perception works directly, but I do understand how it works indirectly, i.e. via sense organs and sense-data. — Corvus
There's a homunculus lurking here.What you are seeing is a memory of the cup... — Corvus
Yes, but going on past experience on the fora, it won't happen. :wink:We need to get past the picture of a process called "perception". If nothing else, Austin has shown that this is a figment that is simply manufactured by philosophy. — Antony Nickles
.Between Zhuang Zhou and a butterfly there must be some distinction! This is called the transformation of things
"I see a barn" is not wrong. One might usefully say we will meet at the barn, and be understood by those who know it to be a church. Isn't the point that "I see a barn" is not the whole story?I don’t think there’s a right or wrong way to talk about this, necessarily, but I do think a defender of the value of ordinary language is going pretty far out on a limb here. — J
And if pressed, I'd have to agree with Austin, that what we see is a church, albeit one that looks like a barn. — Banno
The cups exist independently of me, it's just that all I see is patches and blobs from which I infer(?) the existence of a cup.
Austin is pointing out flaws in some arguments for that scenario, particularly in the wording of the argument, which appears to be misusing common words. — frank
That depends on whether one is aware that it has been camouflaged, of course. — Banno
I'm not seeing(!) a point here, either in favour or against the arguments we are considering. — Banno
...I still feel the classic account of indirect perception which has been around from the time of Plato is more reasonable. — Corvus
...where he discusses difference in usage of the words "looks" "seems" and "appears" ...was more like English semantic chapter rather than Philosophy... — Corvus
Sure. Touching someone indirectly is possible. Think of a dermatology doctor wearing thin surgical rubber gloves, and performing skin examination of a patient. His specially manufactured surgical gloves are made so thin, almost transparent and super sentient to the doctor's hands so he can feel the parts of the skin being touched just like with skin to skin, but there is a barrier between his hands and the patient's skin being touched and examined.These are not easy issues to work through. One thing that might help is remembering that sight is not the only sense, and that an account of how we perceive must wok as well for touch and smell as for vision.
So are you sure you understand how it works to touch something indirectly? To smell the coffee, indirectly?
I certainly don't. — Banno
The research paper about the topic was in a Psychology and Neurology article. I remember reading it.There's a homunculus lurking here. — Banno
Sure. IS there a presumption that there is only one correct answer here? Those in on the joke see a church. The duped see a barn. The explanation is that the church has been made to look like a barn. I don't see a problem.The point is about what it is that we see. — Fooloso4
Exactly.What would be the point of camouflaging it if not to fool those who do not know that it is a church? — Fooloso4
The duped think they see a barn. They are mistaken. What they see is a church, made to look like a barn. I don't see a problem.What is the basis for the distinction between what something looks like and what we see? — Fooloso4
But we don't see a barn, we see a church that looks like a barn. How does dressing that up in terms of objectivity change that? Did camouflaging the church transform it into a barn? I don't think so. It just made it look like a barn.It seems as though Austin is basing the distinction on a questionable assumption about objectivity, as if we don't see a barn because it is a church. — Fooloso4
Is he dismantling anything or merely presenting a different way of thinking about it. — Janus
Cool. In each example you give, you are able to set to clearly the indirect case that allows us to make sense of the direct case. — Banno
He is not presenting a different way of thinking (another answer or theory) about this (manufactured) problem of direct or indirect access (and all the related philosophical manifestations). — Antony Nickles
The duped see a barn. — Banno
But we don't see a barn, we see a church that looks like a barn. — Banno
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