in agreement on direct perception — creativesoul
I'd say there is ample evidence of perception and thinking being entangled. — wonderer1
Maybe you misunderstood what I meant by "distant". I just meant "situated outside the body". — Michael
The known mechanics of perception make clear that objects outside the body and their properties are not present in conscious experience (which does not extend beyond the body), and so in no meaningful sense are "directly presented". — Michael
Simply saying that they're direct isn't explaining what it means to be direct. — Michael
Take the duck-rabbit. — Michael
What sits between the lemon and the creature's smelling?
— creativesoul
A necessary relation, and some means by which it occurs. (??)
— Mww
Causal. Biological machinery(physiological sensory perception). — creativesoul
So, again, in what meaningful sense can we still say that perception of distant objects is "direct"? — Michael
There are (at least) two parts to perception; sensation and cognition. — Michael
…..I think such perceptual distortions are caused by special circumstances. — Janus
Perceptual experience may be… — flannel jesus
”perception sometimes distorts reality. We know this to be so because mostly, it doesn't". — Janus
What sits between the lemon and the creature's smelling? — creativesoul
Realism is what both sides agree upon… — hypericin
Once we hit page 20 we will surely be able to say what it is we are arguing about. — Leontiskos
We perceive the world via phenomenal experience.
— hypericin
The world is first in the chain of events leading to phenomenal experience, and the experience is last. Therefore, we perceive the world indirectly.
— hypericin — Mww
I think there is no real place for skepticism within the transcendental idealism, and I take this to be one of its flaws. — Metaphysician Undercover
We perceive the world via phenomenal experience. — hypericin
The world is first in the chain of events leading to phenomenal experience, and the experience is last. Therefore, we perceive the world indirectly. — hypericin
You think thought and communication are divorced from brain activity? — ucarr
….the noumenal section…. — ucarr
Reflexivity and redundancy are not synonymous. — ucarr
spending the rest of your days in solitary confinement within a white room would be for you a matter of indifference. — ucarr
I think brain activity occurs in spacetime. — ucarr
Guilt is an everyday example of the self judging its own actions and finding fault with itself. — ucarr
The gist of my thesis is that the self is not reducible to a unitary person. — ucarr
You seem to be implying self cannot be objectively aware of self. — ucarr
Is there any differential in space and time separating the self and its thoughts? — ucarr
….a) a thought is about the judgment of the self in reaction to a perception of the world — ucarr
…..b) a judging self is self-aware in its acts of judgment….. — ucarr
…..and self-awareness requires a separation of self (…) from self….. — ucarr
…..if there is no separation of self from self…. — ucarr
this inter-communitive relationship — ucarr
When the self has a thought, the content of the thought gets conveyed to the self having the thought. — ucarr
the conception is posterior to the intuitions which Kant confirms are active in each person. — Paine
Sort of taking half of Descartes' certainty at the expense of the other. — Paine
He does say at the beginning that it is an empirical proposition, so yeah, I'm disagreeing with that — Janus
….where is the "immediate" object? — Pez
I can take it only as subjective opinion…. — Pez
the only fact, that I can be sure of is, that I exist. (…) reminiscence to Descarte's „cogito ergo sum“ — Pez
But any knowledge in a strict sense about objects entirely out of our consciousness is impossible, especially regarding their behavior in the future. If this was the case, Hume's arguments are indeed irrefutable. — Pez
Would You not say a dream is of Your own making? And as long as You dream is it absurd to say You live in that dream? — Pez
What do You mean by "really existent things"? — Pez
…..Transcendental Idealsms has nothing whatsoever to do with ordinary idealism or solipsism. — Pez
Does this mean that transcendental idealism is in the end unavoidable and there is no realistic alternative to this world-view? — Pez
The spatiotemporal world we live in is, according to Kant, of our own making. It exists only in our ideas (Vorstellung) and gives us no clue to what these things might be „an sich“ or per se. — Pez
Your misunderstanding seems to come from thinking judgements are concepts….. — Corvus
…..and judgements have no association with reasoning in the operation. — Corvus
Worshipping Kant and CPR as if he is some God, and CPR is the bible is not a good philosophy. — Corvus
CPR is not a bible…. — Corvus
It has to be interpreted and understood in making sense way for the present days. — Corvus
”To understand Kant is to transcend him." — Corvus
If you already have the concepts of things, why do you need further judgements on them? — Corvus
How can you judge if the apple taste good without having eaten it? Just by conception of apple, it is impossible to judge if the apple tastes good. — Corvus
….judgement needs reason for its proper operation. — Corvus
The association theory of mind for Hume and Kant is not that the different mental faculties are the same entities. It means they work together just like the car parts as you presented. But you seem to misunderstand the association theory of mind. — Corvus
Judgement doesn’t conclude, it synthesizes.
— Mww
Why does it synthesise? What does synthesis do, if it doesn't offer conclusion? — Corvus
But it doesn't mean that reason has nothing to do with the other mental faculties. — Corvus
How can judgement function for rational conclusions — Corvus
Reason can serve nothing useful or rational if it stood itself in the mind with no connections to the experience, appearance, intuitions and judgement. — Corvus
I am not sure if reason has no warrant or entitlement to do in the pursuit of empirical knowledge…. — Corvus
But reason when applied to the appearance…. — Corvus
…..proper account….. — Corvus
….various commentaries….. — Corvus
Few, if any, other things pique my interest as much as meaningful human thought, belief, and/or experience. — creativesoul
I do believe all experience shares a core set of common denominators. — creativesoul
Generally, all meaningful human experience consists in very large part of correlations being drawn between different things by the individual at that time. — creativesoul
I still maintain that at conception there is no meaningful human experience. — creativesoul
I think it undeniable that correlations are drawn in utero. — creativesoul
I've found that the subject/object dichotomy is incapable of properly accounting for all meaningful human experience. — creativesoul
I am convinced that biological structures are key. — creativesoul