Perception is the wibbly wobbly organisation of data into an always fleeting, always updating model of our environment. — Kenosha Kid
So we arrive at a thesis for qualia, in that for you, they provide properties of experiences.
— Mww
They _are_ properties of experience, by definition, aren't they? — Kenosha Kid
the seeming of qualia — Kenosha Kid
if reference to an object is the experience, or the possible experience...
— Mww
If... Is this you introducing the idea, or a mistranslation of mine? — Kenosha Kid
Aside from saving me from prepending every reference to an object with "my experience of" — Kenosha Kid
shorthand for reference to the experience of the object. — Kenosha Kid
When I refer to the red flower, I am generally referring to my experience of it. — Kenosha Kid
Properties of those experiences are therefore also interesting, and we have the word 'qualia' for them. — Kenosha Kid
I'm interested in the bit between photons hitting my retina and me perceiving a red flower. — Kenosha Kid
I just meant collapsing the distinction between objects and our experiences of them in language doesn't seem helpful for talking specifically about experience. — Kenosha Kid
I think the collapse we're talking about is hardcore idealism. — frank
Aside from saving me from prepending every reference to an object with "my experience of"...... — Kenosha Kid
Collapsing the distinction between a thing and my experience of it eliminates the language to ask interesting and relevant questions — Kenosha Kid
....acknowledging the shorthand allows me to ponder how we get from currents along optic nerves to experienced images. — Kenosha Kid
When I refer to the red flower, I am doing so as a shorthand for my experience of the red flower. — Kenosha Kid
Under which circumstance could objective reality remain inaccessible to us? — Mersi
What fundamental properties (or flaws) must we accuse of our cognitive faculties to justify this assumption? — Mersi
And this prevents us from just going right back to a new bias, a new inclination of a different color, but inclination nonetheless?
— Mww
Yes, but the decision is made from a more fully developed intellect (...) more rational (...) develop the full capacity of logical reasoning (...) a matter of introspection (...) a matter of time — Metaphysician Undercover
That's the whole point. — Metaphysician Undercover
So any bias can be overcome, that's the nature of free will, and will power. — Metaphysician Undercover
We naturally have feelings, but can certainly distinguish a good one from a bad one.
— Mww
I don\t agree that we can "certainly distinguish a good feeling from a bad feeling". Sometimes the distinction is easy, other times not so easy. — Metaphysician Undercover
Doubt implies dismissal Without the opportunity for correction.
— Mww
No, "doubt" implies indecision. — Metaphysician Undercover
we need to reassess the principles to see what the problem is. — Metaphysician Undercover
Learning to overrule whatever biases one is inclined toward due to genetics or predisposition, is part of a proper education. — Metaphysician Undercover
....some innate biases can be overcome. — Metaphysician Undercover
we cannot properly distinguish between good and bad biases, when we are already biased. — Metaphysician Undercover
This means we must rid ourselves of all biases, form an open mind, then reassess all those dismissed biases from this newly established position. — Metaphysician Undercover
Skepticism instructs us to doubt..... — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore we must subject anything which appears as knowledge, to doubt. — Metaphysician Undercover
Learning to overrule whatever biases one is inclined toward due to genetics or predisposition, is part of a proper education. — Metaphysician Undercover
Thoughts can trigger emotions, but there can also be emotionless thoughts. To complete I would say that emotions require thoughts not the other way around. — neomac
Thoughts can trigger emotions, but there can also be emotionless thoughts. — neomac
Within the debate between materialism and idealism it could be asked which is primary? — Jack Cummins
is the rational, the cognitive, derived from the non-rational, the non-cognitive? — Srap Tasmaner
there is no magic thread to stitch the two together — Srap Tasmaner
That there are these two realms seems inarguable. — Srap Tasmaner
You could read the ‘language-game’ approach as suggesting that there are rather more than two realms, but they’re all just a matter of how we use language in different ways for diverse purposes in varying circumstances. — Srap Tasmaner
I don’t have a knock-down argument that the cognitive (rational, linguistic) is grounded in the non-cognitive (non-rational, non-linguistic). I’m not sure there can be one. — Srap Tasmaner
It’s easy to describe such a ‘mechanism’ but pointless, because there is no chance at all that you could describe an algorithm that could predict what he was going to play. — Srap Tasmaner
Oh well. — Srap Tasmaner
But what if reason evolved to provide fitness rather than truth? — frank
But there are two other ways to ask that question: (i) what makes human knowledge possible? and, in a somewhat different vein, (ii) what makes human beings knowers? — Srap Tasmaner
tired analogy of describing the progress of a game in terms of its rules — Srap Tasmaner
there are things about playing soccer they do not know. But there are also things they do not know how to do in the other sense: they cannot do them; they lack certain skills — Srap Tasmaner
And there are things about playing soccer you cannot understand if you lack those skills. — Srap Tasmaner
The development of a skill new to you can change how you understand the game — Srap Tasmaner
If having some skill is a prerequisite for having some cognition, then by ignoring skill you would miss an entire class of cognition, and mischaracterize what’s left. — Srap Tasmaner
Thus the importance of honoring language games? — frank
Why would it be far fetched? — frank
holographic universe. (...) Apparently it's a serious thing, tho. — frank
The properties experienced of the object are subjectively imposed.
— Hanover
I pointed out that experienced properties of the object are not imposed by us (that is, are not subjectively imposed) — Janus
....knowledge...the fundamental way human beings relate to the world.... — Srap Tasmaner
How would you know if you had failed? — Srap Tasmaner
...knowledge....one of the fundamental ways human beings relate to the world — Srap Tasmaner
.....knowledge.....not quite fundamental..... — Srap Tasmaner
When it comes to empirical knowledge, I would say the limits cannot be predetermined. — Janus
Apart from representational models another simple way of framing perception is saying that we see objects as they are revealed to us — Janus
there is for us the merely logical idea of what the object could be in itself. (...). Or what import could it have — Janus
In humans, knowledge is not of things but of representations of things. I think obviously.
— Mww
Is it so obvious, though? This is one way of thinking about the situation, to be sure, but is it the best way? — Janus
But it isn't necessarily true that there are physical objects.
— frank
Given a certain set of initial conditions it is. Different conditions, different theory, different theory, different predictions/conclusions/possibilities .....
— Mww
Yes, but I think that's another way of saying that physical objects are possible, but not necessary. — frank
But it isn't necessarily true that there are physical objects. — frank
But there are physical objects that it is possible to know about, so there must be things as they are in themselves.
— Mww
This is a hinge proposition? — frank
to the extent we wish to depart Kant and speculate upon the noumenal, we'd be required to impose causation upon it because that's what synthetic a priori truths do - they force a particular view on the world. — Hanover
Kant's notion of the 'thing in itself'; is it. for him, unknowable — Janus
I can't make any sense of the version of Kant presented here. — Srap Tasmaner
I'm interested in hearing what people's views are on the notion of the enlightened individua — Tom Storm
as a way of grounding the natural sciences, you need to write “The world I find myself in”. — Srap Tasmaner
The world I find myself in is the world as it is, preemptive of my considerations of it.
— Mww
Well, this can’t be the first thing you say. — Srap Tasmaner
I mean, where else would we be found
— Mww
So this is a reasonable starting point, and all Heidegger does is take exactly this and think it through, alright, so what is a world? what does it mean to be in one? — Srap Tasmaner
if we are found in the world, then everything else we can know about must be found in the same world
— Mww
And then this is the next thing — although Heidegger keeps fiddling with the order in Being and Time (....) Are the things we find in the world “in” it the same way we are? How hard is it to see that the answer has to be “no”? — Srap Tasmaner
At the very least, there’s the simple point that the universe does not consist of a philosopher and the table he gazes at thinkingly; there’s the whole rest of the world around them and they’re each in it. — Srap Tasmaner