If perceptual experience entails awareness of the perceptual experience, then awareness of an object (via perceptual experience) must equally entail awareness of the perceptual experience and, by extension, awareness of the object. — Luke
Therefore, it seems to me that you are still unable to coherently maintain a distinction between direct and indirect experience. — Luke
On your view, if I smell smoke then I am directly aware of the smell of smoke but indirectly aware of the smoke. So I can never know if I am smelling smoke or smelling something else? — Luke
If you use "awareness" as a replacement for "perceive", and if you have direct awareness of your perceptual experience (as you claim), then surely you must "perceive [your] perceptual experience". — Luke
How so?These statements seem to contradict each other? — Luke
You do not perceive an internal object that represents an external object; you perceive an external object. Indirect realists misuse the word "perceive". — Luke
You continue to equivocate on the meaning of “perceptual experience”. — Luke
It is only mediated in the production of the perceptual experience, not in the experience itself. — Luke
The question of "what perceives" absolutely relates to the discussion because If we don’t know who or what perceives we cannot say whether perception is indirect, direct, or otherwise. — NOS4A2
If we don’t know, or refuse to say what it is that perceives, then it is impossible to distinguish between the perceiver, the intermediary, and the objects of perception. — NOS4A2
If we do not know where the perceiver begins and ends we cannot say where it ought to appear on the causal chain. — NOS4A2
I'm fine with saying that through the direct perception of light we indirectly perceive the object — NOS4A2
I am indirectly perceiving an apple — NOS4A2
That is still direct perception because it describes a direct relationship between a perceiver and his environment — NOS4A2
Indirect perception proposes the perception of a host of cognitive mediators, mental constructions, representations, and so on. — NOS4A2
It takes account of the many, empirically factual, mediations which cause a mental construction of a representation presented to 'the perceiver'. :)
Precisely, you can never know.
A (Direct): The phenomenological olfactory experience of smoke
B (Indirect): That the olfactory experience belongs in the category "smoky"
C (Indirect): That there is smoke in my room
D (Indirect): That there is a fire somewhere nearby — hypericin
Note how each of the indirect awarenesses, they can all be wrong. B, there might be a chemical leak that happens to smell somewhat similar to smoke, my categorization is mistaken. C, I may be recovering from COVID, and my sense of smell is messed up, the smell is hallucinatory. D, a maniac might be pumping smoke into my house. — hypericin
No i don't, and I am utterly done with going int he circle you lead yourself in. Your words are getting you into a muddle that i have tried for two pages to bring you out of. I don't need to be correct to note this particular issue you're having. — AmadeusD
Suffice to say, as a final thought on the actual disagreement in position, that this line above is utterly incoherent and again, a perfect exemplar of what I have tried for at least two pages to avoid, directly addressing where your terminology is either 1. nonsense, or 2. unhelpful and attempted a coming-to-terms. — AmadeusD
I find it hard to accept that we can never know that there is smoke in your room. If the smell isn't enough, you could move closer to the source of the smoke to satisfy yourself. You might also see the smoke and/or start coughing from the smoke. It's absurd to say you could never know that there is smoke in your room. How did you learn how to use the word "smoke" in the first place if nobody ever knew that it was smoke? — Luke
If it's D and a maniac is pumping smoke into your house, then the smoke being pumped into your house would explain the smoky smell. You can again know that it is smoke you are smelling. — Luke
It may be a hallucination or an illusion, but it cannot always be a hallucination or an illusion. — Luke
We agree that correlations can be drawn prior to(far in advance of) experience, but I suspect for very different reasons. — creativesoul
I have a strong methodological naturalist bent, a preference for ontological monism….. — creativesoul
….compatible with, an evolutionary timeline. — creativesoul
The experience is meaningful to the dog, but not the sensor. The sensor detects and the dog perceives the very same thing. — creativesoul
….it's akin to saying “creamy ice cream”. (…) perception is one element of experience. — creativesoul
I would not even agree with saying anything much at all stays between the ears aside from the biological structures residing there. — creativesoul
I think you're saying something along the lines of not all experience includes language use. I agree. — creativesoul
Biological machinery(physiological sensory perception) completely determines what sorts of things can become part of a creature's correlations….. — creativesoul
People are very often mistaken about their own mental events. — creativesoul
Note that none of the nouns used in this sentence refer to any person, place, or thing, so it isn’t clear what you are speaking about, if anything. — NOS4A2
Given your empirical facts you ought to be able to at least point to one of them. But we have examined the biology of animals and human beings and have found no such entities, nothing that any of those nouns refer to. — NOS4A2
Last I check we are a little more than brains, or some other organ, so I need not pretend the perceiver exists somewhere on the inside. And if your claim is that perception is mediated by our own body, which amounts to saying the perceiver is his own intermediary, I’ll just have to laugh it off. Sorry. — NOS4A2
Sorry, I should have said, you can know there is smoke in the room, but never with absolute certainty. Knowing empirical facts always entails doubt, because we always know them indirectly. — hypericin
I genuinely, given the above making little sense to me, don't know which aspect of the discussion you're referring to. If you're trying to say that I cannot point to an intervening element in the process of perception, the transition of light rays to electrical impulses is one. If you mean I can't point to "a perceiver", then again, you've already done my work for me by noting that 'you' or 'me' fits there- or, more accurately, made it clear that I'm doing nothing wrong by referring 'a perceiver' as you can easily note that this must be a human, in our discussion. It refers to anyone who could be perceiving. This is not ambiguous. and is not hard to determine, as you rightly did so while objecting.
Nothing in this passage has anything to do with any of my claims, besides you pretending that our sensory system is not mediated, heavily, between object and experience. Which it is. Plainly. So, if that's not your claim, you'll need to do a bit better than state something I haven't claimed, and laughing it off.
It is an empirical fact that our sight is mediated by parts of our body. You are not being serious if you rthink the body perceives. A dead body cannot perceive. End of discussion, as far as that goes. So I hope that's not your claim. I would further hope that you've noticed your version of a perceiver flies in the face of the majority of conceptions of identity or personhood. I would also hope you'd have noticed that I've addressed that unfortunate fact about the sum human knowledge - we do not know in what a 'person' or 'perceiver' consists. We simply do not. You don't. No one does. We do our best with what we have, and you seem to be rejecting that attempt on the basis that you have some secret, fool-proof conception of what a perceiver is. Given that you do not, i fail to see how these incredulous objections could go through.
I do know, actually. I can ask any living human organism if he perceives and the answer is invariably “yes”. — NOS4A2
I’m willing to hear your arguments and evidence that say otherwise, but to me this is more evidence of an attempt to smuggle dualism and idealism past the customs. — NOS4A2
I should have said this earlier: I don’t see what makes you an indirect realist, because I don’t understand what is your perceptual intermediary. Awareness? Perceptual experience? You seem to allow for direct perceptual experience of real objects, but that is direct realism. — Luke
I don't allow for direct perceptual experience of real objects. Perceptual experience is representational, we are aware of it, and the representation is of real objects. But this doesn't mean we have direct perceptual experience of real objects. — hypericin
By close analogy, the words you type presumably are representations of your thoughts. I am directly aware of the words you type. But I am only indirectly aware, by any definition of 'indirect', of your thoughts. The words are the intermediary. — hypericin
And what does it say if you do the exact same experiment, but ask it to support indirect realism instead of direct? Or... maybe I'm misreading it. Is it trying to support one or the other? We obviously can't see everything you said to it so that makes it a bit hard to interpret its replies — flannel jesus
I don’t quite recognise my claims in its responses to me. — AmadeusD
[quoting Claude 3 Haiku]Perhaps the most constructive path forward is to resist the temptation to declare a decisive victory for either direct or indirect realism, and instead focus on developing a more holistic understanding of the human experience of the world - one that acknowledges the complexities and ambiguities inherent in our perceptual faculties. — Pierre-Normand
From my perspective, the question of the thread looks like an attempt to address a complex subject (actually a diverse set of subjects) with a false dichotomy. — wonderer1
Great minds... :wink: — wonderer1
Indeed! Although your detractors may rather feel vindicated in their intuition that you are a bot ;-) — Pierre-Normand
It seems to follow that it is. If the “direct perceptual experience” is a representation and if the representation is of real objects, then the “direct perceptual experience” is of real objects. — Luke
The indirect realist says that our perceptual experience is of some perceptual intermediary. They do not say that our awareness is of some perceptual intermediary. — Luke
P1: We are aware of perceptual experiences.
P2: Perceptual experiences are representations of mind-independent reality.
P3: We are aware of representations of mind independent reality. (From P1, P2)
P4: If one is aware of a representation, one has indirect awareness what it represents.
C: We are indirectly aware of mind-independent reality. (From P3, P4). — hypericin
I challenge P4.
...
However, if perceptual experience entails awareness of the perceptual experience, then you have the same awareness of both the perceptual experience and the perceived object. Your awareness of the object is limited to your awareness of the perceptual experience, so it's the same awareness in both cases. — Luke
If the “direct perceptual experience” is a representation and if the representation is of real objects, then:
The “direct perceptual experience” is a representation of real objects
Which I agree with. No logical move lets you just snip out "a representation" in this proposition. — hypericin
I then made it clear, with the example of smelling smoke, that it is not the same awareness in both cases.
So now what? — hypericin
The logical move that lets me snip out “a representation” is substitution. A perceptual experience is a representation and a representation is of real objects. Therefore, a perceptual experience is of real objects. — Luke
What distinction do you make between your awareness of smelling smoke and your perceptual experience of smelling smoke? How are these different? — Luke
That is not a valid substitution. "A representation is of real objects" does not mean that "a representation" equals "of real objects". — hypericin
The "perceptual experience of smelling smoke" refers to the qualitative, ineffable smoky smell. The "awareness of smelling smoke" or "awareness of the perceptual experience of smelling smoke" refers to the binary fact (or 0-1 spectrum) that you are consciously cognizant of that qualitative, ineffable smoky smell. — hypericin
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