If I have a color detecting machine where when I place a colored object in front of it, it will report the color in its display. However, one day it stops reporting the color on the display. We checking the display and is functioning fine. What sense is there in saying “Nevertheless the machine is still detecting the color even when we place it in front of the machine”
The same goes for a person looking at the colored balls. — Richard B
I'm not so sure. It's not the sort of thing we can check, right? — Moliere
Cool. So we can agree on embodied cognition. — plaque flag
That language is directed at that shared world ? Toward objects and other selves in it ? — plaque flag
Mind is something a body does , a patterned way of moving. Even that minimal monologue is moving parts. — plaque flag
To me this is a strange and very questionable statement. This really does sound like a ghost story from over here. — plaque flag
Isn’t intentionality a fundamental part of consciousness? Isn’t that pretty much what consciousness is for? — Jamal
Isn’t intentionality a fundamental part of consciousness? Isn’t that pretty much what consciousness is for? — Jamal
'Direct' should be read as inindirect, a negation or cancelling of the original mistake. — plaque flag
Consciousness (the semantically slippery eel) seems to extend to distant stars in some sense, or astronomy is bunk. — plaque flag
I say forget about internal theaters and secret screens. — plaque flag
...the naive realist holds that things appear a certain way to you because you are directly presented with aspects of the world, and – in the case we are focusing on – things appear white to you, because you are directly presented with some white snow. The character of your experience is explained by an actual instance of whiteness [understood in context to be some mind-independent property of snow] manifesting itself in experience.
Disjunctivists are often naïve realists, who hold that when one perceives the world, the mind-independent objects of perception, such as tables and trees, are constituents of one’s experience.
To talk about seeing is just as much to talk about talk about seeing. — plaque flag
I said that humans don't always have to apply concepts when they see. — plaque flag
How is this related to my claim that concepts are norms ? — plaque flag
Sure. As a practical matter, for now, you can mutter to yourself so quietly that nobody hears what you say. — plaque flag
I claim that 'just thinking' a number not truly but only relatively 'immaterial' and private. — plaque flag
I claim that we talk about the tree and not an image of the tree. — plaque flag
The human applies the concept smoke. — plaque flag
I'm challenging this framework itself. — plaque flag
I've noticed that people on TPF sometimes say things like "perception can't be linguistic because I can see things without saying anything," or "language cannot be social because if I were stranded on a desert island I'd still be able to talk and read." In these cases I wonder if they're making a solid point that I'm just not getting, or if they simply don't understand what we mean. — Jamal
I guess I should have clarified. It's about human perception. The idea is that in perceiving, a human cannot help but be linguistic. Both we and dogs perceive, but our perception is inextricably linked to our concepts and thereby to language. — Jamal
The chains come later and depend upon us being able to access reality to be able to say — Moliere
"directly connected" I'd say means there is no more than one relationship between a perceiver and a percipient. — Moliere
Exactly! That's what it means! — Moliere
Only that our perceptions tell us about the real. They are directly connected to the real, in some relation. Because they are directly connected to the real we can utilize them to come to understand the real better. — Moliere
I want to float an idea -- What if both experiences of the dress are Directly real? — Moliere
The direct realist claims that talk about the tree is actually about that tree — plaque flag
What does it mean for you to be convinced that you saw a gold dress ? — plaque flag
As I said, I just don't know what the brain is doing to create the experience of hearing. — frank
I think it's better to talk about people being able to be wrong. The point is they are trying to talk about the world. — plaque flag
I see a tree on a private internal screen — plaque flag
Exposing a brain to a particular wavelength of light to see how the brain or particles/waves of a brain reacts to the light does not necessitate the need to posit “sense data” to understand the science behind the phenomenon. — Richard B
If the biological act of hearing involves using the body to perceive physical sound waves, it cannot be said that a man is hearing voices in his head, because there is neither the biological activity nor the sound waves required to hear such sounds. — NOS4A2
A philosopher, as such, makes claims about semantic norms — plaque flag
Interestingly, we by-pass the talk of “sense data”, and use everyday ordinary language of objects to set up some sort of correlation. — Richard B
But you only can say some empty generalization like “it is cause by some mind-independent object.” — Richard B
But I do know with great certainty about my “sense data”. Even if I don’t know what is causing my “sense data”, I know for certain what my “sense data” is. And what is that? In this case, “sense data” of a tree. But did you not say that you did not know what is causing your “sense data”, so you can’t say it is “of a tree”. — Richard B
To what are you appealing to say so ? How could you possibly establish truths about the nature of perception without relying on inferential and semantic norms ? How could any theory avoid absurdity if it neglected to address or even acknowledge the condition of its possibility ? To do philosophy is to take up a duty to conform to certain norms and speak about a world beyond the self. Or is logic a private matter ? But that would be a self-cancelling statement. — plaque flag
It's not I see the tree directly but (much better!) I talk about the tree ( our tree) and not my image of the tree. — plaque flag
