Nature doesn't draw lines. We do, and we can be wrong sometimes, depending upon what we're delineating.
If you agree then what's the issue? — creativesoul
I favor a linguistic approach to this issue. What exactly do we mean by 'being' and 'independent'? — Eee
For a transcendental or Berkeley idealist, are there things that exist independent of their mind, whether it be other minds, or other bodies? — Harry Hindu
The point is that it doesn't matter whether the external stuff is other ideas, or material, or whatever - only that there is stuff that exists — Harry Hindu
As for the skeptical alternative, that would require a clear definition of what it means to know anything. — Harry Hindu
What are the viable alternatives? Are there only two - solipsism and realism? — Harry Hindu
Is there a correlation between us and the world? If so, then isn't science getting at what is? — Harry Hindu
The redness I see is just "in my head" and not the same thing as a surface that reflects light at a certain wavelength. — Michael
If we deny non-empirical knowledge, the science of mathematics would be impossible. — Mww
In this respect, Kant has no problem with objects existing before or without us, he's only making the point things must be explicable in our concepts. Kant, as an emprical realist, has no problem with My Everest existing at a particular height before any humans measure it. — TheWillowOfDarkness
From this can we rightly assume that the natural human instinct is to view our ‘seeing this tree or that table’ as projected outward rather than as given by external illumination? — I like sushi
Along these lines if we talk about ‘what it is like’ what does that sentence mean? The ‘like’ is a redundant word because we’re not really asking about ‘likeness’ at all. To be a bat is to be a bat, and to be human is to be a human. — I like sushi
"Mt. Everest" picks out a particular mountain. That mountain existed in it's entirety prior to being named. — creativesoul
Do we picture a chair in the room (and no person present)? But then that's just a counterfactual (disembodied) experience. — Michael
Anyway I'm bowing out, I don't want to hijack the thread. — Wayfarer
You notice the hidden assumption in your last question? The 'real world'? — Wayfarer
But he still maintained that in some fundamental sense, time itself was a 'primary intuition' of the observing intelligence, and denied that it had absolute or objective reality; that science itself is still dealing with the realm of phenomena. — Wayfarer
That question doesn't make sense to me. Does it to you? Is that what you meant to ask? — creativesoul
'Before' implies duration, duration is predicated on there being time, and time is somehow dependent on the perspective of an observer. — Wayfarer
If Mt Everest were endowed with sentience, he/she/it would probably be incapable of cognising h. sapiens, because we're so tiny, and our lives so ephemeral, that they wouldn't even register in his/her/its
consciousness. Glaciers and rivers, maybe, because they stick around long enough to (ahem) make an impression. — Wayfarer
Please set out the referent for the term "that". I — creativesoul
Please set out the referent of "that". — creativesoul
If it is the case that Mt. Everest existed in it's entirety prior to it's discovery, then it does not matter what one's philosophical bent may be... Mt. Everest existed in it's entirety regardless of whether or not one believes that. — creativesoul
I'm just trying to delineate. I'm not feeling objectionable at the moment. — creativesoul
Mt Everest existed in it's entirety prior to it's discovery? — creativesoul
An amoeba? — creativesoul
I would agree if we changed that slightly to "help generate"...
What's a "perceiver"? — creativesoul
What argument needs made here? — creativesoul
Experience is a quality?
Consisting entirely of Quale? — creativesoul
This realist doesn't. — creativesoul
What exactly does one mean by subjective experience. — TheMadFool
And they say the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis ain't true... bullshit! — Wallows
Having pain is the experience. I have direct access to having pain of my own, and I have indirect access to another's. There are two kinds of accessibility here, yet you've claimed we have none. — creativesoul
I wonder if that's entirely true. Scientific objectivity doesn't mean you ignore essential and defining aspects, here subjective experiences, of the object of study. Rather scientific objectivity is specifically designed to eliminate observer bias and in no way does it/should it overlook, in this case, subjective experiences. — TheMadFool
Is "indescribable" a description? If not, then how did it become a common saying? How did other humans learn to use the phrase? — Harry Hindu
I don't see how this answers my questions. — Harry Hindu
But they're properties of my brain. I mean, when brains are interfered with those things respond differently, so I don't see that as a reason to discard physicalism. — Isaac
I'm a physicalist simply because it seems a default for me, and I need a good reason to discard it. — Isaac
