What needs to be explained is the meaning of "direct". — Michael
consciousness, whatever it is, doesn't extend beyond the brain, and so it's physically impossible for an apple and its properties to be "present" in my conscious experience. It might be causally responsible for conscious experience, but that's all it can physically be. — Michael
Regardless, Direct Realism is the position that private experiences are direct presentations of objects existing in a mind-independent world, not about the nature of language. — RussellA
https://psychology.fandom.com/wiki/Direct_realism
Direct realism, also known as naïve realism or common sense realism, is a theory of perception that claims that the senses provide us with direct awareness of the external world. In contrast to this direct awareness, indirect realism and representationalism claim that we are directly aware only of internal representations of the external world.
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Direct realists might claim that indirect realists are confused about conventional idioms that may refer to perception. Perception exemplifies unmediated contact with the external world; examples of indirect perception might be seeing a photograph, or hearing a recorded voice. Against representationalists, direct realists often argue that the complex neurophysical processes by which we perceive objects do not entail indirect perception. These processes merely establish the complex route by which direct awareness of the world arrives. The inference from such a route to indirectness may be an instance of the genetic fallacy.
If I was the blind leading the blind, i would speak of the un-touched toucher, or the unfelt feeling, the still small voice, the inner warmth, the beating heart, or some other relation, that we might share in our solitary awarenesses. — unenlightened
Let me stop you there at the heart of our disagreement. The self is not 'behind' the senses or its data. The self is (I claim) a discursive performance of the body, a creative appropriation of community norms. The self is a way that a body acts in a society of other such selves. The self is a body that is trained to track itself for decency and the coherence of its claims and (in some cultures) for the amplification of its autonomy. This self is mostly inherited and reconstituted community 'software', including especially a language in which selves make sense, in both senses of the phrase. I mean we understand selves (make sense of them) as origins of claims (and other less symbolic deeds) for which they are then held responsible. Part of our training involves learning to apply concepts properly (within claims).the mind needs information from the other side of our senses — RussellA
Are you saying the Universe didn't exist for the 13.8 billion years before humans appeared on Earth, 315,000 years ago ? — RussellA
Are you saying you have no private experiences, you stub your toe and feel no pain ? — RussellA
Which world are you referring to, the world as we perceive it, or the world as it is independent of our perception of it. — RussellA
That we have to use language to talk about perception isn't that when talking about perception we talk about language. — Michael
The problem of perception concerns making sense of 1), not 2). — Michael
Good. Then can you finally stop talking about language and start talking about seeing? — Michael
I can see things without saying anything, and without performing any covert action that others can recognize. Even if it's not private in principle, it's private in practice. — Michael
I don't "mutter" to myself when I think. I just think. The mute can think. — Michael
You can say that thinking of a number is reducible to brain activity if you want. — Michael
The point is that it involves no overt action that ordinary humans going about their ordinary lives cannot recognize as happening. — Michael
As a simple example, I can think of a number and not tell you (or anyone). I don't have to perform any kind of overt action to do this. I just think it.
Do you accept this? — Michael
What's a concept? All you appear to have done is replaced the notion of phenomenal character with that of cognition. I'm not sure how that helps you avoid the "private" aspect that you take so much issue with. — Michael
Then I think it's disingenuous of you to characterise your position as being direct realism. — Michael
:up:In these cases I wonder if they're making a solid point that I'm just not getting, or if they simply don't understand what we mean. — Jamal
"perception can't be linguistic because I can see things without saying anything," — Jamal's example objection 1
Spoken words are the symbols of mental experience and written words are the symbols of spoken words. Just as all men have not the same writing, so all men have not the same speech sounds, but the mental experiences, which these directly symbolize, are the same for all... — Ari
"language cannot be social because if I were stranded on a desert island I'd still be able to talk and read." — Jamal's example objection 2
But then tell me I am missing the point? — Fooloso4
The background can be sketched, as simply and clearly as possible. — Fooloso4
philosophy strikes me as an ongoing discussion over the nature of reality. — Arne
I’ve almost never been impressed by attempts to explain Heidegger’s notions of conscience or authenticity, and this is no exception. — Mikie
:up:Seems to me that morals are easier to exemplify (post hoc) than to generalize into concise laws. It's about concern. — jorndoe
Idle talk is the possibility of understanding everything without any previous appropriation of the matter. Idle talk, which everyone can snatch up, not only divests us of the task of genuine understanding, but develops an indifferent intelligibility for which nothing is closed off any longer. — plaque flag
<grin>If I were a Nazi, I would want to be the best Nazi possible. Otherwise, why bother? — Joshs
One reason I like the above line of thought is that I find it so much more satisfying, intellectually and philosophically, than, to be blank, religion’s fairy tales. And I think it may even be a true and accurate picture of reality. — Art48
. . . I entered even into my inward self . . . and beheld with the eye of my soul . . . above my mind, the Light Unchangeable. — Art48
It’s our core because it’s central to all the thoughts, emotions, and physical sensations we experience. Consciousness is like the backbone of the human body, or the trunk of a tree. It’s core. — Art48
They are something to play with, juggle, kick down the street. — T Clark
The poem is a showing, not a saying. — Banno
Clichés are to be avoided because they do our thinking for us (and imagining, feeling, etc), or they shut out thinking; — Jamal
I am far more interested in the nature of being — Arne
I just noticed you have a transformer symbol as your avatar. Electronic engineer? — frank
We do tend to attach cool sounding labels to that which we cannot explain and then proceed as if the label explains all. — Arne
His lectures were published at his leisure while Being and Time was rushed. Both the History of the Concept of Time and Basic Problems of Phenomenology were first published in the 1970s. Being and Time was a classic by then. — Arne
This is iffy. It's either a tautology or missing the point. Preverbal competence ! Toolbeing. In the beginning was animal skill. In the beginning was the deed, the handshake, the welltimed fart.The background can be sketched, as simply and clearly as possible. — Fooloso4
I agree. The same is true of some of the lectures immediately following Being and Time as contained in Basic Problems of Phenomenology. — Arne
:up:The most insidious part is that one's lack of understanding never reaches the surface. — Fooloso4
Those who know that they are profound strive for clarity. Those who would like to seem profound to the crowd strive for obscurity. For the crowd believes that if it cannot see to the bottom of something it must be profound. It is so timid and dislikes going into the water. — The Gay Science, 173