I don't think the scientific image is the Real beneath some paintjob of color and values. — plaque flag
I don't think 'mind-independent' is a very clear term. — plaque flag
We see red apples, the blue sky. We can talk about colors (as adjectives, concepts,...) — plaque flag
Yes, I need my nervous system to do this. But my eyes and brain let me see this apple in our world directly. Yes, I need light to come from the apple to my retina. That's part of how I see the apple. But I don't see an image of the apple, and I don't see a private world in which the apple is given directly. I see the apple right there in our world, the world. And I talk about that apple. It is the case that an apple is there in front of me. — plaque flag
What do we make of inverted color spectrums ? — plaque flag
Yes, I think you can intend my private experience. You can speculate about my concealed feelings. Such concealed feelings make sense (I claim) inasmuch as they function in inferences. — plaque flag
The point is that the norms for applying concepts are impersonal, public.
'I fucking hate getting wet, so I ran naked into the rain' does not make sense in any but the most outlandish context. — plaque flag
I never denied this. — plaque flag
I see the cat and not an image of the cat. — plaque flag
Yes. It's in his body. It is a disposition. It's all connected to the rest of the world, not hidden away in some box which is causally and logically isolated.
That's the point. — plaque flag
You don't see the cat at all. — plaque flag
Because he was enraged, he through the coffee pot into the wall. — plaque flag
No, I don't accept that. — plaque flag
Why would it ? No one promised a clear line of sight to every intentional object.
This is why I consider 'we talk about the cat and not about our image of the cat' as a less confusing approach to direct realism. — plaque flag
I suggest that consciousness isn't doing much work here. Wouldn't awareness be better ? We are aware of distant stars, apples just out of reach. — plaque flag
We talk about those distant stars — plaque flag
Does not sound like a belief in this quote. — Richard B
It seems that you have this position. — Richard B
If saying "what ever I believe is a fact is a fact" is not ridiculous — Richard B
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
