Sorry, you've lost me. You were arguing that indirect realism was the same as non-naive direct realism. You seem to have abandoned that to ask me what it means to say that an experience is "of" some distal object. I answered that and you said that an indirect realist would agree. I'm no longer sure what you are arguing for or where you disagree. — Luke
I'm trying to make sense of the conclusion that the heater grate six feet to my left is not what I see. — creativesoul
Okay. So then are distal objects mental constituents of experience? — creativesoul
If the indirect realist agrees that some distal object has interacted with one's sense to cause the experience, then I'm not sure what to make of this:
"Experience does not extend beyond the body. Distal objects exist outside the body." — Luke
Are you saying that none of that counts as a distal object? — creativesoul
What it means to say that an experience is of some distal object is that the distal object has somehow interacted with one's senses to cause the experience. — Luke
It follows that no constituent of experience extends beyond the body.
Is that about right as well? — creativesoul
Non-naive realists believe that our perceptions can be of distal objects, whereas indirect realists believe that our perceptions are only of mental representations or sense data. — Luke
I look out into the distance and see a tree in the yard. There's a squirrel running around the tree, doing its thing. You're claiming that the squirrel and the tree are either not distal objects or - if they are - they are not(cannot be) constituents of experience.
Is that about right? — creativesoul
Are you saying that distal objects are unnecessary for the response? — creativesoul
I get all that, I just don’t understand how someone can see something without eyes. If sight involves eyes, and those eyes are missing or closed, then is he really seeing?
I don’t think so. In my view the nomenclature is strictly metaphorical, a sort of folk biology, the result of the disconnect between states of feeling and states of affairs. — NOS4A2
Perhaps better verbs are in order, for instance “I dream of such and such” or “I am hallucinating”. — NOS4A2
As you say, experience doesn’t extend beyond the body, and the indirect realist does not believe the external world is a constituent of his experience. Well what is? — NOS4A2
That’s what I don’t understand. In layman’s terms viewing, seeing, looking etc. involves the eyes. How does one see a representation? — NOS4A2
Do we experience the external world? The direct realist would say yes, the indirect realist would say no. After answering we can approach the philosophical disagreement. So what’s missing? — NOS4A2
For indirect perception, something in the world causes a representation of an apple, which is viewed by something in the brain. — NOS4A2
Perhaps we can formulate it another way. Do we experience “distal objects”? — NOS4A2
Secondly, the indirect realist's insistence on the pure subjectivity of secondary qualities like color is a significant weak point in their view. Pushing this line of argument risks collapsing into an untenable Cartesian dualism, where the "real" world is stripped of all qualitative richness and reduced to mere geometric form.
Do you think the roundness of the apple merely is a mental property of the human beings (or of their brains) who feel it to be round in their hand? — Pierre-Normand
This sounds like a form of Berkeleyan idealism since you end up stripping the objects in the world from all of their properties, including their shapes and sizes. — Pierre-Normand
Does not your property dualism threaten to collapse into a form of monistic idealism? — Pierre-Normand
Secondly, the indirect realist's insistence on the pure subjectivity of secondary qualities like color is a significant weak point in their view. Pushing this line of argument risks collapsing into an untenable Cartesian dualism, where the "real" world is stripped of all qualitative richness and reduced to mere geometric form. — Pierre-Normand
The non-naive direct realist agrees with the indirect realist that we do not perceive the WAIIII, but does not define direct perception in these terms. For the non-naive direct realist (or for me, at least), direct perception is defined in terms of perceiving the world, not in terms of perceiving behind the appearances of the world to the WAIIII. — Luke
The most common form of direct realism is Phenomenological Direct Realism (PDR). PDR is the theory that direct realism consists in unmediated awareness of the external object in the form of unmediated awareness of its relevant properties. I contrast this with Semantic Direct Realism (SDR), the theory that perceptual experience puts you in direct cognitive contact with external objects but does so without the unmediated awareness of the objects’ intrinsic properties invoked by PDR. PDR is what most understand by direct realism. My argument is that, under pressure from the arguments from illusion and hallucination, defenders of intentionalist theories, and even of relational theories, in fact retreat to SDR. I also argue briefly that the sense-datum theory is compatible with SDR and so nothing is gained by adopting either of the more fashionable theories.
It appears that you only want to argue against naive realism, which is fine, but I think I've addressed that in my post above. — Luke
You don't see the screen; you see sensations? — Luke
This suggests that there is more to the visual phenomenon than just the raw retinal data. There is a sub-personal interpretive or organizational component that structures the experience in one way or another before it is given to conscious experience. — Pierre-Normand
Why can't distal objects be constituents of experience — creativesoul
I think that you've given indirect realism too much credit. I see no reason to think that if colors are not inherent properties of distal objects that the only other alternative explanation is the indirect realist one. They can both be wrong about color. — creativesoul
With the phrase "visually appears to grow" I refer to the visual information about an objective increase in the dimensions of an object. — Pierre-Normand
Do you believe that naive/direct realism cannot deny color as a property of objects? — creativesoul
When you are hanging upside down, the flower pot sitting on the floor may momentarily appear as if it is inverted and stuck to the ceiling. — Pierre-Normand
Suppose you are walking towards a house. As your distance from it is reduced by half, the house doesn't visually appear to have grown twice as large. — Pierre-Normand
The eyes are active; they seek out and use the light, transducing it, converting it to signals for use by the rest of the body, in a similar way you mention. My guess is indirect realists do not consider such an act as an act of perception because it doesn't involve a mediating factor. — NOS4A2
I am a direct realist and do not believe distal objects and their properties are actual constituents of the experience. — NOS4A2
I try my best to make sense of the argument, but so far "experience" appears to be a roundabout way of describing the body, at least metaphorically.
But there are epistemological problems with indirect realism, and they are insurmountable. If one is privy only to his experience, or representation, whatever the case may be, how can he know whether they represent the real world? — NOS4A2
Reading through, the play for indirect realism seems to be to pick two supposedly distinct aspects of a perceiver and to have one mediate perception for the other. This gives the impression that there are 3 parties, a relationship that is necessary for mediation, and for indirect realism.
But the distinction is abstract and has no empirical grounds. All one has to do is observe a perceiver and note that only two parties are involved in the perceptual relationship, and all the indirect realist has really done is implied that the perceiver mediates his own perception, which isn’t mediation at all. — NOS4A2
Must they, though? — jkop
I'd say seeing a colour is neither right nor wrong, it's just a causal fact, how a particular wavelength in the visible spectrum causes a particular biological phenomenon in organisms that have the ability to respond to wavelengths in the visible spectrum. — jkop
You postulate that we (humans) have the experience with our kind of eyes / brain, so how come you say that another organism must have differently working eyes and brain to have the same experience? — jkop
What do you mean by saying that photoreception is subjective yet not special?
The argument that there is no "correct" orientation or "correct' way of perceiving the world seems to me help make the case for direct realism rather than for indirect realism. Direct realists think it is possible for our perceptions of the world to be veridical, despite there being no "correct" way to perceive it (whatever that might mean). It is indirect realists who seem to think it is impossible for our perceptions to be veridical, and this seems to be because we either do not perceive the world "correctly" or because we cannot know whether we perceive the world "correctly". — Luke
Now, it's true that when your turn you head all the way upside down, some illusion regarding the orientation of the external world may ensue. — Pierre-Normand

