Perceptual experience may be… — flannel jesus
Consciousness doesn’t extend beyond the body, so objects outside the body are not present in my consciousness.
That suffices as indirect realism for me.
It's what direct realism always was, e.g. going back to Aristotle. Direct realists believed in things like A Naïve Realist Theory of Colour/primitivism, whereas indirect realists believed that colour is a mental phenomenon (which may be reducible to brain states).
Now that the science shows that the indirect realists are right, it seems that direct realists have retreated to a completely different position, consistent with indirect realism, but insist on calling themselves direct realists anyway. — Michael
And what does "more primary" mean? We are talking about experiential indirection... — hypericin
and your position would not have been called realism at all, because it terminates in perception and not in the real. — Leontiskos
No, there is no termination in my view. We can know things though as many layers of indirection as we like (but never with certainty). — hypericin
For the Rays, to speak properly, have no Colour. In them there is nothing else than a certain power and disposition to stir up a sensation of this Colour or that. — Isaac Newton
The sensation is distinct from and different to the stimulus. This is easier to understand with other senses such as smell and taste — Michael
For no particular reason….
”perception sometimes distorts reality. We know this to be so because mostly, it doesn't".
— Janus
How do we go about proving whatever distortion there may or may not have been, is caused by perception? — Mww
Yep. What we see is not an upside-down sense-impression created by the brain, but the things in the world.Yeah, a species in which half the population sees the world upside down doesn't seem scientifically plausible. — wonderer1
The argument has nothing to do with the status of so-called 'secondary qualities' or particle physics and you seem to be conflating naive realism with direct realism, so I am a loss as to how to respond. — Janus
Secondary qualities are the result of interactions between the body and the objects that display them. For example, of course colour considered as a visual phenomenon, cannot manifest as such except as seen. I see no puzzle in that. — Janus
I don't think changes in logic affect the larger issue, which is that, upon close inspection, relations don't end up being some sort of special case of properties, or somehow more ephemeral, they end up being the only type of property. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Seems to me that all you have said here is that epistemic notions like knowing are relations between an individual and a proposition.Epistemicly, there is no way to discover a non-relational property. — Count Timothy von Icarus
…..I think such perceptual distortions are caused by special circumstances. — Janus
Seems to me that all you have said here is that epistemic notions like knowing are relations between an individual and a proposition
What sits between the lemon and the creature's smelling?
— creativesoul
A necessary relation, and some means by which it occurs. (??) — Mww
Yep. What we see is not an upside-down sense-impression created by the brain, but the things in the world.
But Michael now thinks there isn't an upside down and a right way up anyway, so the point is moot, so far as the thread goes. One can't nail jelly to the wall, the discussion hereabouts being the jelly. — Banno
Just to give you a little more bang for buck, no one seems to think that the chemicals that 'cause a lemon to smell like a lemon" aren't the lemon(they aren't), or the light particles reflecting off of an antelope are not an antelope(they aren't). Not even the object stimulates the senses. Far be it from me...How anyone can either reject this or think it anything other than indirect realism is what puzzles me. — Michael
See the "known"? That implies an attitude, and hence someone having the attitude. Yep, if something is known, then there is someone who knows.. What would be an example of a property that is known without interaction? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Imagine an organism with a peculiar sex difference; the males' eyes and the females' eyes are, relative to the other, upside down such that what the males see when standing is what the females see when hanging upside down, and vice versa.
The way the males see the world is very different to the way the females see the world (with respect to its orientation).
Imagine also that this organism is intelligent with a language. Both males and females use the same word to describe the direction of the ground and the same word to describe the direction of the sky.
And we can add to this by imagining differences in size (e.g. that one of the sexes has a magnified vision relative to the other) and colour (not to mention smell and taste).
The way they navigate and talk about the world is the same, and yet the way they see (and smell and taste) the world is very different. The appearance of the world is a mental phenomenon. It is the appearance of the world that is the immediate object of their rational consideration. — Michael
creativesoul, excuse my answering a question to you. — Banno
For example, if someone is watching a film it is not at all clear that the sounds are more direct than the story. — Leontiskos
No, not a window.If you say the base level is the sensory experience then that is where the stack of layers terminates, is it not? Or are you viewing sensory experience as a window through which we come into contact with something else? — Leontiskos
See the "known"? That implies an attitude, and hence someone having the attitude. Yep, if something is known, then there is someone who knows.
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