I think it's really interesting that Representationalism is claimed by both direct and indirect realists in various contexts. — flannel jesus
Link to source.If I believe that it is raining I can separate my belief from the fact that it is raining, but when I see the tree I cannot separate the visual experience from an awareness of the presence of the tree. This is true even if it is a hallucination and even if I know that it is a hallucination.
If nothing is experienced then what is the distinction between having an hallucinatory experience and not having an hallucinatory experience? — Michael
Under any normal use of language, things are experienced when we hallucinate (and when we dream); it's just that the experience isn't a consequence of external stimulation of the relevant kind. — Michael
hallucinatory and veridical experiences would be subjectively distinct — Ashriel
what postmodernism has to say about mathematics. — Tom Storm
the back-and-forth between radical sceptics and their opponents is perennial, rather than just a debate of the modern period. — Jamal
What we don't agree on is whether or not it is correct – or even sensible – to say that the colour red is a property of that external world object. Indirect realists say that it isn't, whereas direct realists (or at least naive colour realists) claim that it is. — Michael
There is no analogy between 'pain' and 'actual objects'. — AmadeusD
Pain is the experience of certain biophysical causal chains. Not so with visual data, imo. — AmadeusD
Is someone claiming there's 'pain' out there not being experienced? — AmadeusD
I would certainly be open to exploring whether that latter issue is actually additional and sans aberration there's some way to assert reliability in perception. I've yet to see that though. — AmadeusD
According to this article on Time and Physics there might not be a temporal structure at a fundamental level (referring to recent theories of quantum gravity).Could you please let me know what you mean by the contingent here? — jkop
I think P1 is valid no matter how fast is the process. — MoK
The short answer is that Kant is an empirical realist, but the thing-in-itself is not an empirical thing. It's a conceptual construction, a thing imagined as having no properties, and as such a limit beyond which there is nothing more to know. We should not expect to have access to such a thing.I'm wanting something from Kant that indicates he thinks we have an access to things-in-themselves. — AmadeusD
At the planck scale P1 is arguably meaningless or false. For example, does it take time for particles to pop in to, or out of, existence?P1) Time is needed for any change — MoK
Realistically, I do think that there are some objective elements of humor, and that while, in practice, people may find it subjective, that there are probably better or worse ways of viewing and opining on it, akin to art or aesthetic theories — IvoryBlackBishop
The involuntary act of laughter was then exploited by those who were good at making people laugh as a way to gain acceptance within the group. — Pinprick
I'd less characterise these as paradigm shifts (which represent progress and no loss of territory) and more as straightforward redrawing of the boundaries of philosophy. — bert1
I don't think they know the causes of psychosis or even claim to know. It's like they are sure it must be physical but they can't show the mechanism. — Mark Nyquist
The treating professions are biology oriented and drug treatment oriented and often do horribly at treating these patients.
On the subject of physicalism, I take this as an example of physicalism gone wrong.
So in trouble shooting psychosis cases the professions should be looking at this relation between physical brain and mental content. ... — Mark Nyquist
Is this something that you think you can demonstrate? — wonderer1
Numbers existing outside of brain state?...does that have a defense? — Mark Nyquist
Whether you're a physicalist or not, what do you think the best arguments for it are? — frank
So, I am asking to what extent does the existence of 'God', or lack of existence have upon philosophical thinking. — Jack Cummins
An interesting question is whether it's possible to return to a previous paradigm. — J
But philosophy is not a science — Banno
What are such paradigm shifts in Philosophy? — SpinozaNietzsche
I agree, but the questioning of common sense realism is often limited to a superficial or willful rejection, perhaps because it just seems too banal or mundane for an intellectual to take seriously.It’s common sense to believe what we observe is real but anything common sense is worth questioning. — Tom Storm
almost all of us behave as realists the moment we engage with what we know as the external world. Even the idealists. — Tom Storm
Some are born blind even, but that's no good reason to reject the reality of visible things. Colours are partly created by the biology of various visual systems, and partly by the properties of the light or the surfaces that reflect it. For example, a clear sky in daylight is disposed to be seen as blue by any animal with the appropriate visual system, because of the causal relations between the wavelength of the light and the biology of the visual systems. Granted that some lack the ability, but again, that's no reason to reject the reality of the conditions under which the sky is seen as blue.The colours we 'know' are created by our biology. Other animals see different colours, less or more than humans. Or none. If this realism, it is not external to human experince. — Tom Storm
Is it possible that there is something logically unsound with the following proposition – a proposition that some skeptics embrace?
“We can never know anything about an external world because all we have when we make such an assertion is our perceptions ... .” — Thales
I agree :up:You can investigate anything scientifically. But you cannot scientifically answer questions that are asked incorrectly. — Wolfgang
Not only is the term 'consciousness' used in two different senses but also 'perspective'. A first person perspective is indeed a perspective, but a third person perspective isn't. There is no such thing as a third person perspective.Many believe that one can combine the first and third person perspectives of consciousness simply because they are the same term, consciousness. But both have nothing to do with each other, they are completely different levels. — Wolfgang
Wait a minute. We epistemically objectify mental phenomena all the time by talking about them, studying behaviors etc. despite their mode of existing (first person) which makes them ontologically unavailable for other kinds of examination (third person).You cannot objectify qualia, therefore you cannot examine them scientifically. — Wolfgang
we cannot even explain how the taste of chocolate could be explained neurophysiological. — Manuel
:up: Philosophy of Language + Philosophy of Science + Metaphysicsthe can of worms known as the Philosophy of Language, which is at the heart of Philosophy of Mind — sime
The fact that Philosophy of Mind overlaps with Philosophy of Science doesn't prevent philosophers of mind from using a sharp and categorically clear approach to science. One philosopher of mind that I sometimes read is John Searle. His naturalist approach is fairly clear, I think (although I'm aware that it's been criticized for being covertly dualist.)As long as the philosophy of mind does not make use of a sharp and categorically clear approach to the theory of science and instead loses itself in all kinds of irrationalities, it can be called dead. — Wolfgang
..all sentient beings are animals, but not all animals are sentient.
The interaction between contemplation and its expression in text, pictures, music etc. is often reported as constructive for the mental health of writers, graphic artists, musicians etc... a) is it constructive or destructive to your mental wellbeing? — Benj96
If you want to know for sure whether something is useful, try to use it. Also inconsistent and false insights can be useful, for example, in political or religious contexts (iseful doesn't necessarily mean good).b) how does one know for sure if the insights from meditation are useful — Benj96
.c) ... ..boundary ... ..between introspective thought processes and extrospective thoughts meet. In essence an understanding of what the “self” In question really is. — Benj96
Contemplation in itself is neutral, it is literally just vision. Vision is good or bad depending on the object of intentionality of vision. I have witnessed "hell" or the vision of logical contradiction, but I also have the vision of logical order. As such, this requires prudence and wisdom to do. — IP060903
When I look out the window, I see the same things that everyone else does. Depending on what I'm seeing, and how others around me see those things, we might disagree on what they mean, or even what they are — Wayfarer
I thought so too but then compare Norway with UK, for instance. There are no mountains or fjords that separate groups of people, yet there are many diverse dialects. Possibly because groups of people are kept spart by social barriers.I think there's a greater diversity of dialects in Norway than in most countries. — Ø implies everything
Contrary to some posts, reaction to the environment as mediated by metabolism (chemistry) is not consciousness. — Lionino