We're still not on the same page, because I claim contradiction within the system, therefore I cannot conclude that the existence claims are valid. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, phenomenal qualities are essentially private, so obviously they can’t satisfy public criteria. — Michael
Then I think this is our fundamental disagreement. As above with my reply to RussellA, I think it quite appropriate to say that I am aware of these phenomenal shapes and sizes and colours. I recognize them as being present, as differing from one another and other things, as having names, etc. — Michael
So shape, size, colour, and motion are "features of the perceptual episode". Do you accept that I am aware of these shapes, sizes, colours, and motions, and so that I am aware of the "features of the perceptual episode"? Do you accept that this perceptual episode and its features are visual in nature? Do you accept that to be aware of visual features is to see these features? — Michael
Isn't there a difference between the "virtual object" as a collection of transistors turning on and off and the "virtual object" as the thing seen with shape, size, colour, and behaviour? — Michael
I’m not saying that’s all there is, I’m asking how else can this be understood. — Tom Storm
How I interpret this, is that you believe it exists by stipulation. if something is stipulated to exist, then it does. I have a problem with this, because it circumvents the judgement of truth, allowing you to employ premises (axioms) without the requirement of truth. Ultimately the conclusions are unsound. — Metaphysician Undercover
So when the bionic eye is being used to play a VR game, the direct object of perception — the "object" acting as intentional object — is not a mind-independent material object? — Michael
Is this also true when the eye is being used to help the wearer navigate the real world? — Michael
The issue with the definition of "countably infinite" is that the procedure cannot be carried out. The formula states something which is impossible to correctly finish, therefore the numbers cannot exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think the second quote is an articulation of the first. It would make sense for the religion of one's cultural background to capture something the others don’t. Not that the reverse isn’t sometimes true for some people. — Tom Storm
have never understood the resurrection story, or, as some put it: God sacrificed Himself to Himself to save us from Himself because of a rule He made Himself.
That may be a bit glib, but the blood sacrifice element never made sense to me. The fact Jesus could walk away from it just demonstrated how little was sacrificed, he was omnipotent to begin with. No doubt there are innumerable theological exegeses to offer to redeem (sorry) this account. — Tom Storm
That said, I lean more toward the first analysis than the second. Is it possible to doubt whether I have two hands? Yes. Do we know the general sorts of things that justify our (comparative) certainty about two-handedness? Yes. — J
I often wonder, in such cases, why Christianity rather than Hinduism, Islam or Buddhism. When read deeply, they too offer cast contemplative opportunities. — Tom Storm
If a bionic eye, as well as being able to help the otherwise-blind navigate the real world, can be used to play VR computer games, then what, if anything, do we see when we use it to play VR computer games?
I'd be interested in what you think @Esse Quam Videri. I don't intend to start a new debate so won't argue against anything you say, just curious. — Michael
For example, imagine that there is forty chairs in a room somewhere. There is simply an existing bijection between the chairs and the integers, so that the count is already made without having to be counted. It's just a brute fact that there is forty chairs there, without anyone counting them. This is a form of realism known as Platonic realism. The numbers simply exist, and have those relations, which we would put them into through our methods, but it is not required that we put them into those relations for the relations to exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you saying that when you look at a table, you perceive the spatial relation between the table top and table legs indirectly? — RussellA
I don’t understand how the Sun can persist through different times when in Presentism there is only one time, namely the present. — RussellA
We need to learn the names "yellow" and “circle”, but I would have thought that our ability to perceive yellowness and circularity are innate, something we are born with. — RussellA
I would appreciate it if sometime you could find any flaws in my main argument against Direct Realism (both Phenomenological Direct Realism (PDR) and Semantic Direct Realism (SDR)). — RussellA
But I’m not sure about this; so many skeptical challenges can be interpreted not as questioning a hinge proposition but simply as demonstrating that our language allows us to ask “Why?” about pretty much anything. — J
I think you're reading too much into the word "object" — and note that I didn't even use the word "object" in the context of mental phenomena. — Michael
Whatever pain is, it is a literal constituent of phenomenal experience, unlike the fire that is causally responsible for this phenomenal experience by burning the nerve endings in my skin. — Michael
Are you saying that direct and indirect realists are using the word "perception" wrong?
...Or are you saying that direct and indirect realists are...are wrong about what would satisfy "direct perception" and about what would satisfy "indirect perception"? — Michael
I don't know how to answer that. — Michael
For there to be a token identity between the features of the experience and the features of the thing experienced. — Michael
The IR is saying that i) there is no stick in the mind-external world in the first place, ii) the fact there is no stick in the mind-external world is what implies indirectness, iii) the stick we perceive exists as a concept in the mind, not as a fact in the mind-external world. — RussellA
For the DR, the Sun exists in the mind-external world. Accepting Presentism, an object cannot persist through different times when only one time exists. The tensed truth “The Sun exists now” is true now has no relation to “the Sun persists now”. — RussellA
I would appreciate it if sometime you could find any flaws in my main argument against Direct Realism (both Phenomenological Direct Realism (PDR) and Semantic Direct Realism (SDR)) — RussellA
Suppose that many times I perceive the combination yellow circle. — RussellA
Reject what specifically?
1. That colours and pain are mental phenomena
2. That colours and pain are directly present to the mind in phenomenal experience
3. The transitive law that therefore mental phenomena are directly present to the mind in phenomenal experience
4. That distal objects are not directly present to the mind in phenomenal experience
5. That the phrase "to directly perceive X" as used by traditional direct and indirect realists means "X is directly present to the mind in phenomenal experience" — Michael
Are you asking about the binding problem? We don't have a good explanation of that yet. — Michael
Taken from the problem of perception, "the character of your experience is explained by an actual instance of [a white circle] manifesting itself in experience". — Michael
The DR agrees that they perceive a Sun because of a causal chain, but as it is logically impossible to know what initiated any causal chain arriving at our senses, what the DR is perceiving cannot be something in the mind-external world.
If the DR is not perceiving a “worldly object”, then they can only be perceiving something in their mind. — RussellA
But how can something persist in a mind-external world, if persists means exists at different times, and in Presentism only one moment in time exists — RussellA
I thought that DR requires that perception is grounded in a mind-external object. This mind-external object may in fact initiate a causal chain, but it is not the causal chain that the perception of the DR is grounded in. — RussellA
In what sense is judging that in the mind-external world there is a Sun different to inferring from my sensations that in the mind-external world is a Sun? — RussellA
The indirect realist's claim is that pain and colours are mental phenomena and are directly present to the mind in phenomenal experience, whereas a truck is a machine that exists at a distance from the body and is not directly present to the mind in phenomenal experience, and so therefore perception of mental phenomena is direct and perception of trucks is not direct (is indirect) — with perception of trucks only made possible by the perception of mental phenomena. — Michael
Once again, this shows that you are arguing for semantic direct realism, which is distinct from phenomenological direct realism and compatible with phenomenological indirect realism. — Michael
Why? You're just begging the question again. I'll just respond by saying that in (2) the strawberry is the object of intentionality and the visor is part of the causal infrastructure that realizes the intentionality. Where do we go from there? — Michael
The Indirect Realist (IR) and Direct Realist (DR) agree
1 - There is a temporal causal chain that follows the laws of physics from a mind-external something to perceiving the Sun in the mind. — RussellA
Beliefs of the IR and DR
1 - The Direct Realist believes that there is a one to one correspondence between the Sun we perceive in the mind to a Sun that both exists and persists in the world. — RussellA
Something in the mind-external world that is constantly changing cannot persist. — RussellA
2 - In the arrow of causation, given a present event, we can determine a future event using the laws of physics, but it is logically impossible to determine a past event. — RussellA
As knowing a past event using a temporal causal chain is logically impossible, only by inference from the present can a past event be hypothesised. This is the position of the IR. — RussellA
I don't understand what you mean by saying that the standard is normative. — Michael
This still seems like special pleading. You're arguing... — Michael
No it doesn't. The visor doesn't purport to do anything. — Michael
