But in fact a choice of "what to see" is already embedded by the fact some human decided to point a camera and post the result to YouTube. The data already carries that implicit perceptual structure. — apokrisis
How could we argue that the world is coloured as we “directly experience” it when science assures us it is not? — apokrisis
I'm a realist who argues in favor of direct physiological sensory perception. I'm not sure if I'd say/argue that direct perception requires awareness of that which is being perceived. Awareness requires an attention span of some sort. Bacteria directly perceive. I find no justification for saying that bacteria are aware of anything at all... — creativesoul
You seem to be reifying our abstract description of how computers work. — Michael
In what way is a wavelength really green? — apokrisis
How does your particular definition of direct realism account for hallucinations and illusions? — apokrisis
Yep. And that is the point. The OP certainly comes off as an exercise in naive realism. You can't both talk about a mediating psychological machinery and then claim that is literally "direct". — apokrisis
Realism is truly indirect as the brain is a hierarchical system attempting to predict its input. And the better practised it gets at that, the more it can afford to ignore "the real world". — apokrisis
Decisions still need to be made about the neural architecture, its width, depth, the neural activation responses on each layer, the anticipatory patterns of neurons and so on. — sime
The poll result shows the naiveté, of those voting. — charleton
You cannot know existence except through the senses and this is an ideal reality. It is unavoidable. — charleton
imprimatur — Wayfarer
My thoughts exactly (although I don't see how Buddhism fits in the picture). — Wayfarer
It’s not embodied cognition I wish to avoid - it is ‘neuro-reductionism’. ‘Oh, that’s just your brain’s way of keeping your genomes alive’. Remember, in our world, the human mind is simply a late arrival, on top of the work of the blind watchmaker, a dollop of apparent meaning-making ability atop the robot that's only mission is to progenerate. — Wayfarer
I think the theory would only become undeniable if human behavior could be reliably predicted on a gene-computer. And I mean the computer should print off the next philosophical masterpiece or great work of literature, before it would have otherwise been written. Until we get that kind of concrete prediction, we really just have faith in a paradigm. — t0m
presume that everyone is in agreement that the conditions of assertion of a and b are not generally inter-translatable. Wittgenstein mentioned in PI that the experiential criteria for (b) are "what he says and does", but that (a) cannot be given experiential criteria in terms of other words. — sime
hat too seems pretty uncontroversial, as long as you don't get into specifics. Does anyone really deny that? — SophistiCat
Really? What do you mean by "human nature," anyway? What would be the difference between possessing and not possessing "human nature?" — SophistiCat
Even though you've lost (waking) consciousness,and (as in dream-sleep) don't know about the life you were in, you're still you, with your subconscious feelings, experience, perception, awareness (of feelings and experience). — Michael Ossipoff
The most you can say is that it's some kind of energy, but who knows. — Sam26
believe they are, so I do believe based on the testimony that we can live out other lives by simply re-entering another body. — Sam26
hat's going on is the quantum mechanics pretty much put the last nail in the coffin of materialism, physicalism, and determinism. — Rich
t doesn't take quantum mechanics to kill materialism and determinism. Both are metaphysics, not statements about how the world is, whether or not that is understood by those who accept or reject them.. — T Clark
You're kidding, right? — Galuchat
The OP is concerned with the relationship between Science and Philosophy. We attach different meanings to the term "Science", so it's only logical that I try to ascertain what you mean by the term "Philosophy" — Galuchat
I didn't say that you are furthering science. I said you are doing science by testing the theory the technology was based on. — Harry Hindu
Do you see your contradiction? — Harry Hindu
Is science about explaining the world? If "Yes", then Aristotle was doing science by explaining the world. — Harry Hindu
Is science about testing theories? — Harry Hindu
If "Yes", then don't we do that every time we use technology based on some scientific theory? — Harry Hindu
What is your modern definition of "Philosophy"? — Galuchat
Technology is a tool that science uses for testing scientific theories. — Harry Hindu
Then please define "Philosophy" in a way which includes activities such as Aristotle's zoological observations? — Galuchat
It's not an observation, but a prediction based on previous observations. Any good scientific theory makes predictions about what you will find, or what will happen, when you test it. — Harry Hindu
Using technology is testing the theory it is based on, and therefore a scientific act. — Harry Hindu
So, Aristotle's zoological observations were philosophy, not science? — Galuchat
The theory being tested is that when a stick is inserted into a termite mound and removed, termites will be on the stick. Now let's test the theory by inserting sticks in to termite mounds and removing them. Every time you do that you are testing that theory. — Harry Hindu
Any time we use technology based on a certain scientific theory, we are testing the theory, which is itself a scientific act. If everyone in your social group is using sticks to draw out termites from a mound, then isn't that testing the scientific observation and the subsequent conclusion that termites attach themselves to sticks when stuck into their mound? — Harry Hindu
Of course it does. How can you make such a claim without using technology (like telescopes)? And how can you test such a claim without using technology (like telescopes)? — Harry Hindu
Does the origin of the scientific method go back "thousands of years" (Jeremiah), or "several centuries" (Marchesk)? — Galuchat
Please, it is completely subjective. — Jeremiah
. Science as a discipline is relatively recent. — Marchesk
I threw you in that mix for this subjective comment.
. Science as a discipline is relatively recent.
— Marchesk — Jeremiah
provided a definition for "Science" in my first post to this thread.
Feel free to provide a different one for consideration. — Galuchat
1) Science: empirical investigation which provides a reliable explanation.
