Who is Frantic Freddie, I'm afraid I don't know what you're talking about here. Are you saying that Nietzsche is borrowing some ideas from other thinkers. I think Nietzsche's concept of amor fati is different from the ancient stoics. It's more above loving and embracing life rather than mere stoic acceptance, which for Nietzsche seems not very life affirming. — Ross
Perception is an activity, not a thing. — hypericin
he question we're addressing is the probative value of evidence, which presupposes representations of "truth" whatever that may be, and which is the subject matter of this thread. That is, when I see something, of what probative value is my having seen the thing in terms of proving the thing exits? That is, does the evidence I possess prove the thing I assert, namely that the thing is as I say it is? It seems we need to know what the thing is if we seek to establish whether my claims about it are true. — Hanover
What are you referring to by "the rest of the world"? — frank
You have to go out on a limb to disagree with him, and like Ciceroninus, you're in danger of turning rationalist (relying on your own reason to say what is, rather than science). — frank
So you say why not just say that the phenomenal is all there is. I say because it's not. But I do agree, pragmatically, none of this matters, where "this" is 90% of what we talk about here. Of course, "this" is a referent; the antecedent is what actually is. — Hanover
Yet I think you probably understand the difference between subjective and objective data. You're quibbling over wording — frank
. My point here is simply to say that should I perceive what I think to be a flower or airplane and there's some reason to dispute it, it makes perfect sense to check the health and accuracy of the perception equipment, whether that be running a diagnostic on the radar equipment or giving me an eye exam. — Hanover
One world, with many different aspects which can be colloquially referred to as "worlds". You are being lawyerly, I guess. — hypericin
we cannot look up from our perceptions. — hypericin
First time through, i read that as "medicated". — Banno
Would Heidegger be banned?
— Cartuna
Only in my dreams, alas.
— Ciceronianus
Well, he ain't around, no posts by him anywhere these days, so either he has been banned or found for himself a forum better suited for his values. — god must be atheist
Nothing is direct in the mental world, everything is abstract and mediated. — hypericin
"A sound" might be a perception (experience, qualia), or a physical event. The former is in your head. — hypericin
You can know many things without direct access to them. You must agree, or you would never read, and presumably make a terrible lawyer. — hypericin
Scientific evidence doesn't support the claim that we can't know, or interact with, the rest of the world in which we live. If we could not, we wouldn't be alive.
— Ciceronianus
The only word I disagree with in this post is the word "know." Remove that word, and we're in complete agreement.
Knowledge = Justified True Belief. Truth is the problem here. I see the flower as X, you as Y, the bee as Z, yet we're all seeing the same thing. What is that thing? Is it X, Y, or Z or an amalgamation of all of them? — Hanover
By the locked-in-the-library theory we can never know whether what's in each others' heads are sights and smells and sounds or something else or nothing. And we can't know about anything outside our heads, either. I can't see how I would ever get to know what's even in my own head or what a head is. — Cuthbert
Does your position require that I actually believe bees and humans perceive in the same way? If it does, I think your position just fails to scientific evidence. — Hanover
You should know it. — hypericin
Any perception is necessarily a co-creation of both the perceived and the perceiver. It cannot be any other way. — hypericin
For something to be consciously perceived, it must be mapped onto a perceptual plane. This perceptual plane is contingent, and has everything to do with the perceiver, nothing to do with the perceived. — hypericin
When you hear a pure 440hz tone, it sounds a certain way to you. But that sound in your head has nothing to do with the vibration in the air. — hypericin
You can't get out into the world itself, ever, the doors to the library are locked. — hypericin
Is the flower the way I see it or the way the bee sees it? — Hanover
Yet Descartes didn't reject the world in which we live, so that must not have been the implication of the evil demon thought experiment. — Hanover
Ok, but it keeps coming back. Descartes has been dead a long time and we still worry about brains in vats. The flies get out of the bottle and then a whole new generation of flies gets in. — Cuthbert
To clarify my analogy: the flower is the passing car and my internal experience is the blinking light. That is, a flower elicits a physical response and it is my phenomenal experience. Is that experience the flower? I'd say no, unless you're willing to commit to the idea that the side blinking light is a passing car? — Hanover
It seems to be a given in Western cultures to think there is oneself, and then there's the external world. — baker
I think when we refer to an "external world" which "exists independently of the mind" we've already accepted a dualism I reject.
But why do you reject it? Based on what? — baker
How do you explain mental illness? — baker
Words have meanings, and as regards the phrase "external world" in the context of a discussion about the philosophy of the mind, external means external to the mind and world means the world we live in, not another world outside our world in the multiverse. — RussellA
You just like philosophers with the surname "Austin" — Banno
If a "constituent" is a part, it is distinct from other parts, which logically demands that bees, flowers, and people are apart from each other. By "apart" I mean not a part of, which means it's separate from me, thus being external.
It is my experience that my perceptions cease upon my unconsciousness, yet it seems the object of my perception is unaffected by unconsciousness. Do you believe otherwise? When I sleep, does my bed cease to exist now that I no longer perceive it? — Hanover
He is addressing the question whether all his experience might be a mere figment of his imagination, including his own hands. — Cuthbert
One aspect of Direct Realism is that the external world exists independently of the mind. As you propose that there is no "external world", am I correct in thinking that your view is neither Naive Realism nor Direct Realism, but something else, such as Idealism, as Hanover suggests ? — RussellA
This is Stoic doctrine, and we know you're a Stoic. Okay.
There is no "thing" called a perception which exists somewhere inside of us.
But this I don't understand.
Are you referring to Stoic epistemology, epistemology according to Stoicism? — baker
What I'm arguing is that the approach of the OP is not naive (direct) realism. It sounds Kantian to me. Per the OP and subsequent clarifications there are said to be external objects and then there are perceptions. How the perception correlates to the external object is left to the unknown. It's being argued that bees have phenomenal states of flowers and people do as well, but they need not be at all similar. — Hanover
There must be an "external world" if pain, love, colour, consciousness, etc are attributes of human beings, yet not attributes of the universe. — RussellA
How? By holding up my two hands, and saying, as I make a certain gesture with the right hand, ‘Here is one hand’, and adding, as I make a certain gesture with the left, ‘and here is another’ (‘Proof of an External World’ 166)" https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/moore/ — Cuthbert
If there is no "external world", then human experiences are just part of the world's experiences. IE, all the attributes of the mind - pain, love, colour, consciousness, etc - are also attributes of the world. As consciousness is a human experience, then consciousness must also be an experience of the world. — RussellA
The spirit of G E Moore is upon my shoulder. If there is no external world, then I'm not posting these words on PF. — Cuthbert
What do you mean by "the same world"? This implies the flower is the same to me and the bee, but you've said otherwise. The question then is to describe those features of the flower that are the same regardless of the perceiver. — Hanover
