One thing we'd know for sure is that if we're going to claim that our perceptions do not tell us what the world is like, we can't use perceptions about what the world is like for support of that. — Terrapin Station
Well, that's what color is, sure. So how are we coding that if things aren't colored? — Terrapin Station
So how do we know that one perception has things right? Namely, the perception that suggests that the other perception has things wrong? — Terrapin Station
Although now that we mention whether it's impossible, what exactly are we coding if not color in our color-coding? — Terrapin Station
Do they perceive them as they are or not. It's a yes or no question, or you can explain why you can't answer yes or no a la "It's not possible to answer that question yes or no because . . . " — Terrapin Station
Sure, and when you make those observations, do you perceive things as they are? — Terrapin Station
How would we know that? — Terrapin Station
The claim that you can know that it's not true presupposes that you can know the world as it is (via perceiving eyeballs, ears, nerves, brains, etc.) for comparison, where we can say which part is the world as it is and which is different from that. — Terrapin Station
I think, "Hmm . . . it rather seems to me like a mistake to think of that as a mistake. — Terrapin Station
That doesn't imply that I'm not a direct realist. Direct realists believe that we consciously perceive the world as it is, directly. — Terrapin Station
It doesn't dissolve the hard problem, though it does indicate that at least everything pertaining to consciousness but the hard problem is solvable.
We can imagine physical mechanisms which discriminate between different wavelengths of light, and we can even imagine plausible evolutionary histories...
The hard question would be, why does our experience of color feel like an experience at all? — VagabondSpectre
No, it's the water that is the object of perception in both cases. — jamalrob
Temperature perception is variable in a way that colour perception is not, and this is expressed in the way we talk and think about hot/cold vs green/blue/red etc. — jamalrob
But still, it is the things that are green. — jamalrob
The relational account holds that the leaves themselves are green (under certain conditions etc). This entails that it is not something mental that is perceived, which is your definition of indirect perception. — jamalrob
I can't think of a way of saying it more clearly. — jamalrob
Why do you reject the relational account, under which colour is a proprty of perceived things, as perceived in a certain way in a certain environment? — jamalrob
Thus, colour is entirely relational. According to taste one could see this as a deficiency in the language--because of the way we use "colour", we can't say whether colour belongs to us or the things we're looking at--or else one could see it as demonstrating the essential relational nature of perception. — jamalrob
I don't see why. Evan Thompson's description is consistent with an account of perception that has been described as "direct". But then, different people mean different things by "direct perception". — jamalrob
But then, different people mean different things by "direct perception". — jamalrob
I don't think saying that the brain produces the experience of colour entails that there is an interior spectator. I imagine Dennett might say, not that the brain produces colours for us to look at internally, but that the relevant events in the brain just are those colour experiences. That's not how I would put it myself, but I don't think the Cartesian theatre is entailed either way. — jamalrob
But the chemical makeup of sugar or reflective surfaces of leaves are properties of those coloured things. — jamalrob
Look at this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wq6V4OD_DSs
It's undeniable a phenomenal Jesus appears and that's what is being discussed here. When I type this post I am reacting to the image of Jesus and not say- it's dimensions, hue, tone, (bit pieces). — JupiterJess
It's impressive and retarded at the same time. — BrianW
1. Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works.
2. Anything that's invented between when you’re fifteen and thirty-five is new and exciting and revolutionary and you can probably get a career in it.
3. Anything invented after you're thirty-five is against the natural order of things.”
And the solution is to live as the Amish, purposefully isolating, remaining ignorant, and living peacefully within the walls of protection built by the corrupted. So many ironies. — Hanover
I've spent many years of my life believing that matter (and energy) is the primary a — Noah Te Stroete
Recently I've been wondering if consciousness is the primary substance that the material world gloms onto or adheres to. — Noah Te Stroete
What are your thoughts on this and what are the implications for free will? — Noah Te Stroete
So what we'd need to look at is why you take the explanations of photosynthesis to be sufficient to "make sense of photosynthesis" to you, — Terrapin Station
Sure. So neural activity isn't going to itself explain consciousness (if we read that literally). A person would have to explain consciousness. — Terrapin Station
What "makes sense of some phenomenon" is going to be different for different people, no? — Terrapin Station
Explanations are sets of words, right? — Terrapin Station
And explanations of how to play a C major seventh chord are not a C major seventh chord, and so on. — Terrapin Station
Are you saying that the explanations of neural etc. activity don't seem like consciousness to you, and you wouldn't count something as an explanation that doesn't seem like consciousness? — Terrapin Station
So, what happens to concepts like "subjectivity", "pains", and "intentionality"? Do we just throw them away or are they indicative that logical behaviourism is not all-encompassing in describing the affective aspect of the mind? — Posty McPostface
f a behavioural solipsist were to come along and tell us s/he known intent inferred from behaviour, how could we prove s/he wrong? — Posty McPostface
But consciousness happens when a physical brain behaves a certain way, right? So replicate that kind of behaviour using the same kind of material and it should also cause consciousness to happen. — Michael
nd if it can occur naturally by DNA-driven cell development then why can't it occur artificially by intelligent design? — Michael
