It would have been good if either this, or your other conception of the conflict, were actually agree upon in the first pages of this thread. Read together, these two passages end the dispute. I have a feeling even Banno would be shown to be prevaricating on this account of the terms. — AmadeusD
Said where? — Luke
Could you elaborate or clarify this? I can't make much sense of it. — Luke
Where did I say that our perceptions are of representations? — Luke
My position is that our perceptual experience typically represents real world objects. That is, our perceptual experience is typically of real world objects; we typically perceive real world objects. The perceptual experience is the representation. — Luke
I see no inconsistency in maintaining that although the content of our perceptual experiences consists of representations, those perceptual experiences are of real world objects. — Luke
If that's what a DR means, I think that would undercut the entire debate and reduce it to literally a problem of stubborn people (may be) misusing words. — AmadeusD
The dispute is over what our perceptual experiences are of, and whether they are of real world objects or are of representations of real world objects. Direct realists claim that our perceptual experiences are of real world objects. Indirect realists claim that our perceptual experiences are of representations of real world objects. — Luke
It might be the naive realists' view that physical objects are in our minds, but I'm not defending naive realism — Luke
To describe what is part or is not part of the content of a perceptual experience--what is included in the experience--says nothing about whether that perceptual experience is of a real world object or is of a representation of a real world object. — Luke
I see no inconsistency in maintaining that although the content of our perceptual experiences consists of representations, those perceptual experiences are of real world objects. — Luke
This is the claim made by indirect realists, not by direct realists. — Luke
when anyone claims to "understand" Nietzsche, I try not to make eye contact and slowly walk away. — Arne
But mostly, I believe that the dispute between direct realists and indirect realists concerns whether or not we have direct perceptions/perceptual experiences of real world objects — Luke
I also believe that a real world object is not part of a perception, and that only a representation of a real world object is part of a perception. I don't have physical (real world) objects in my mind; only representations of them. — Luke
whether or not we have direct awareness of our perceptions/perceptual experiences — Luke
Right, let's just ignore how the CIA literally trained the members of the al-Qaeda and the rise of ISIS was a direct consequence of Obama's policy. Stuff just happens for no reason. — Lionino
while that country's people is completely subject to international corporations and Israel — Lionino
I would suppose that I should not be referred to as 'your guy' in any sense that I am aware of. That turn of phrase seems like the pretentious equivalent of 'bruh'. But yes, quite serious. Is the entire universe not enough evidence? How do you define evidence? — Chet Hawkins
I have only begun to preen. The lightning and the thunder are coming soon. But, no, alas, I am only a humble philosopher, loving wisdom, and trying to help others understand what wisdom is, as many seem to have quite typical and pointless erroneous impressions of what it is. Of course, I admit freely that I am one such, just with less relative error than many and most in my asserted model. — Chet Hawkins
Why bother to respond at all? — Chet Hawkins
He goes on to say: — 013zen
Yankees and the Soviets used and abused the Middle East for a long, long time before nine eleven happened. And then they play victim. Whatever the motivation was, it is evil through and through. — Lionino
Deepak is not serious either, but as in a serious person. — Lionino
I also have no clue what this means. — Lionino
two more pop up. — Lionino
Nietzsche is not much to my taste, why do you dislike him? — Tom Storm
I would say this is generally true of adherents :P
I've never met a Kantian that thinks Kant is wrong, or a Humean that thinks Hume is wrong. lol — 013zen
I'd be interested to hear more. I wouldn't say that he's making things up, but he does take himself to be doing something creative. — 013zen
One might then wonder why anyone bothers trying to make sense of it. — Fooloso4
I think that Wittgenstein, like any philosopher - or human for that matter - is simply thinking through these problems, and gets some things right and other things wrong. We read other philosophers to try and see how these problems have been handled, and what we can learn from them. — 013zen
I present to you, the universe. THAT is my evidence. — Chet Hawkins
offer that the one-eyed man is not in fact considered king in the land of blind. He is put away and thought of as insane. — Chet Hawkins
Reason is fear. Confidence is anger. Who 'wins' when they battle? What of passion as well? — Chet Hawkins
Are you suggesting that "only" those "experiencing it" can grasp the moral character of "it"? And even if that is correct, what is the basis by which their grasp of the moral character of "it" is to be rendered null and void? — Arne
it's moral character exists only in the minds of those experiencing it — AmadeusD
many of Nietzsche's aphorisms are within my muscle memory... — Vaskane
I probably go further than you in thinking that even though it cannot be demonstrated, it is plausible to think that space, time. energy. entropy and causation are human-independently real given what a remarkably coherent synthesis the sciences present. But I also acknowledge there is no definitive measure of plausibility, so... — Janus
The law and morality are not the same and whether "evil" is outlawed by the former does not sever it from the latter. — Arne
The absence of natural rights or the absence of law does not cleanse any behavior of its moral character. — Arne
Evolution is sentient. The whole universe is. — Chet Hawkins
How is any 'choice' not somewhat aware? Answer to the aware: It is always aware. — Chet Hawkins
)Anger is the honest emotion, 'keeping it real', by demanding that all images, all desires, stay somewhat in tune with objective moral truth. — Chet Hawkins
It is indeed a very unaware perspective that denies this obvious approach to 'reality'. — Chet Hawkins
That’s too bad, I did. And though you can refuse it and pretend I didn’t, I’ll still be there granting you the right and defending it. — NOS4A2
Start small. Give your neighbor the right to borrow your lawnmower, or something. — NOS4A2
Might makes right. Or was it the best and brightest make rights? I can’t say I’m a big fan of social Darwinism either way, but limiting social power in favor of state power is the going rate, so you’re not entirely in bad company. — NOS4A2
That is odd. Philosophers have been expounding and conferring rights long before any politician, bureaucrat, or jurist has codified them. Hell, some constitutions weren’t created until the disco era. Perhaps society is just a thief. — NOS4A2
Yet I just granted you the right to free speech — NOS4A2
It is an opinion derived from argument and evidence, all of which attests to the merits of rights. — NOS4A2
If you have better arguments and better evidence in favor of, say, censorship or theft or kidnapping — NOS4A2
The “universal” I’m talking about simply means the right ought to apply to everyone. — NOS4A2
Yes, I’m an absolutist. Everyone should have the right to say what they want. Would you censor him? — NOS4A2
:ok:Until there is a law, however, that belief is nothing more than a belief there should be a law, or a right recognized by law. — Ciceronianus
You seem to be hung up on the idea of enforcement, but no natural rights theorists claim that natural rights cannot be violated, it's that they should not be violated. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The natural right then is something you can point to when justifying political action. E.g. "we are justified in revolting and demanding a constitution because the king keeps violating natural rights," or "this new bill should not be passed because it allows the state to violate natural rights." — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, "children categorically have a right not to be sold off as sex slaves," is a bridge to far for you because it wouldn't be relativistic enough? — Count Timothy von Icarus
And why stop the relativism at individual cultures and societies? Why not let it apply to the level of individual communities or even individuals? — Count Timothy von Icarus
But then why is the "society" the proper dividing line for determining when relativism should kick in? Natu — Count Timothy von Icarus
Society dictates rights? I’ve only seen men dictate rights. — NOS4A2
By “society” I assume you mean men in power. But it isn’t true, in any case, that only some men can confer rights. — NOS4A2
And if you allow only politicians and lawyers the power to grant rights you make of yourself a slave or serf or some other subordinate, at any rate a sorry figure. — NOS4A2
The language faculties are universal. The right to free speech itself has been battle-tested in its own arena, put to the grindstone of trial and error over thousands of years, and has proven itself morally right and socially valuable both in argument and in practice. — NOS4A2
Yes, anyone who doesn’t confer the right to free speech on others and defend everyone’s right to speak is wrong. — NOS4A2
But the general practice exists in all social animals — Vera Mont
I also don't rule it out, nor would I personally find it unnerving to actually find evidence that such is the case. — noAxioms
Was the group’s push for you to conform an example of ‘hive-mind’? — Joshs
They basically have thought themselves into a corner. If they are unable to see the world through your eyes, you become a danger to them. — Joshs
I dont believe in the concept of hive-mind, brain-washing or mindless conformity. People don’t blindly introject ideas from others. — Joshs
it is not because they are being blindly led by the hive-mind — Joshs
they have gravitated to that group based on the fact that they have, as individuals, already arrived at that way of thinking. — Joshs
Once you dig beneath the surface , you’ll find all sorts of splits in ideology among members of the same group. — Joshs
y impression is that you have strong convictions and values yourself, and that there are issues where you blame others for their moral failings as seen from your perspective. — Joshs
You wouldn’t be a part of the legal profession unless you believed in a concept of justice that is able to determine guilt and innocence. — Joshs
So what makes you different from that gay community who tried to impose their values on you? — Joshs
as a standard on the basis of which to judge others. — Joshs
but if I think someone is giving their opinion on something, but making it sound like a fact, I tend to look for another viewpoint. — Beverley
I just get a little argumentative when people write opinions as facts. — Beverley
