That we see the tree's appearance does not mean that the tree 'is' an appearance. It simply means we see what can be seen of the tree, itself. — StreetlightX
Metacognition requires written language — creativesoul
technical with object Bring about (a result such as a physiological effect)
‘the right hemisphere plays an important role in mediating tactile perception of direction’
Do you have an example/candidate of meaning that does not require and/or consist in/of what I just wrote? — creativesoul
Because indirect perception is mediated,... — creativesoul
So, we arrive at the following conclusion:No creature without written language has indirect perception. — creativesoul
The correct answer is both, depending upon the notion of perception. If it is based upon a minimalist criterion, then it would not involve language, and it would be a more physical notion. If it is based upon a criterion that requires complex linguistic notions, including awareness of our own fallibility, then our perception would most certainly be indirect, because it would amount to the affects/effects of one's worldview and would be a more mental notion. — creativesoul
Thoughts? — Agustino
What appeals to me especially is getting behind or around all the pre-interpretedness that we don't think to question (since it's almost invisible as we use it) that traps our thinking in certain loops. — t0m
Well and good, but it's a different matter to the metaphysics of meaning. What interests me, is the idea that rational and mathematical truths are real but not physical. — Wayfarer
Even if this was "in" the Matrix (and it sorta is in terms of mediation), it would still be 'real' in the most emotionally relevant sense, at least for me. — t0m
All thought/belief consists of mental correlation(s) drawn between 'objects' of physiological sensory perception and/or the agent itself(it's own state of 'mind' when applicable). — creativesoul
Correlation presupposes the existence of it's own content. — creativesoul
'Objects' of physiological sensory perception are external to thought/belief. — creativesoul
All meaning is attributed by virtue of drawing mental correlation(s) between that which becomes symbol/sign and that which becomes symbolized/signified. — creativesoul
All philosophical positions presuppose the existence of an external world. — creativesoul
Thought/belief is not existentially contingent upon language. To quite the contrary, it's the other way around.
Thought/belief formation happens prior to language. Thought/belief is accrued. — creativesoul
Thought/belief begins with drawing rudimentary correlations(think Pavlov's dog) and gains in complexity in direct accordance with/to the complexity of the correlations drawn between object(s) and/or self. — creativesoul
This is too rich. Pots and kettles. I'm not interested in your rhetoric apo. — creativesoul
Vanishingly constant or constantly vanishing? — Janus
Actually, the "latest/most recent" was me. — Sapientia
An astute reader can look to the above example that apo has somehow judged to be rightfully applicable to the situation at hand, and clearly see that it is an example that doesn't apply to what I've written. Kant's explanation looms large... — creativesoul
Vanishingly my dear planck. — Janus
Indeed, the grand and only use of examples, is to sharpen the judgement.
It's not redundant Sap. Greater understanding results from being able to talk about something in more than one way. It increases the ability of a reader to relate. — creativesoul
Pleonasm (/ˈpliːənæzəm/; from Greek πλεονασμός (pleonasmós), from πλέον (pleon), meaning 'more, too much') is the use of more words or parts of words than are necessary or sufficient for clear expression: for example black darkness or burning fire. Such redundancy is, by traditional rhetorical criteria, a manifestation of tautology. However, pleonasm may also be used for emphasis, or because the phrase has already become established in a certain form.
...Some pleonastic phrases, when used in professional or scholarly writing, may reflect a standardized usage that has evolved or a meaning familiar to specialists but not necessarily to those outside that discipline. Such examples as "null and void", "terms and conditions", "each and every" are legal doublets that are part of legally operative language that is often drafted into legal documents.
...as is the case with any literary or rhetorical effect, excessive use of pleonasm weakens writing and speech; words distract from the content. Writers wanting to conceal a thought or a purpose obscure their meaning with verbiage.
Once again, rather than focus upon the substance of the post (that time it was Kant) some would rather talk about others on a personal level... — creativesoul
Although, I do the same thing when I want to express the same thing in multiple ways, and/or show different ways to say much the same thing... — creativesoul
Join in there apo. — creativesoul
This seems/appears like the perfect time to allow/permit Kant to place/put apo's latest/most recent ad hom's in proper/rightful perspective and/or point of view.
There is no logical link of 'non-realism' to solipsism. If there were one, it would have been published by now, — andrewk
My attempt to explain this is that people who find it important do so because they believe that non-acceptance of the 'realist' (ie materialist) account logically entails solipsism, which in turn seems to signify ultimate loneliness, and that one's closest and most important relationships are a delusion. — andrewk
Our methodological approaches stand in stark contrast to one another however. — creativesoul
Specifically speaking, the framework will limit or delimit what can coherently be said according to it. — creativesoul
Nothing I've said requires citations. I'm not referencing anyone else's work. — creativesoul
So, in order for either of us to understand the other, we must understand what is meant when either of us use the term perception. — creativesoul
Simply put, on my view, perception is not equivalent to mental correlations. Whereas you fail to draw and maintain that distinction, I draw and maintain that perception is one necessary but insufficient element of mental ongoings. You're not alone though. It is an historical shortcoming pervading the whole of philosophy, philosophy of mind (psychology) notwithstanding. — creativesoul
However, I would note that the notion of "recollect" above presupposes recollecting to someone or something. — creativesoul
But for that notion to have any bite, in order for it to be robust, we must have a relatively good grasp upon what our awareness of the world is without language. — creativesoul
If they have anticipatory imagery, then they must have the ability to generate such imagery. — creativesoul
I suggest that you spend less time thinking about me personally and more time addressing the substance of my posts... — creativesoul
But it's not especially relevant for the metaphysics of meaning as I understand it. — Wayfarer
I don't want to pretend that I've kept up with the direct realism debate, but I think this would be an issue only if it's assumed that what happens when we hallucinate or dream is exactly what happens when we're not hallucinating or dreaming... — Ciceronianus the White
Well if you can make sense of what a thing looks like when there is no looking involved, then be my guest. — StreetlightX
Science attempts to be creature independent, and describe the world as it is. That's why we arrive at theories like QM. — Marchesk
However, it seems apparent that you and I have incommensurate notions regarding what counts as perception. — creativesoul
They become aware of and recognize the differences between kinds of cell structures. — creativesoul
All of it also clearly lends support to direct perception. — creativesoul
My question was about the equivalence of thermodynamic and logical entropy - the 'equation' which you referred to. — Wayfarer
Thermodynamic entropy and Shannon entropy are conceptually equivalent: the number of arrangements that are counted by Boltzmann entropy reflects the amount of Shannon information one
would need to implement any particular arrangement.
The two entropies have two salient differences, though. First, the thermodynamic entropy used by a chemist or a refrigeration engineer is expressed in units of energy divided by temperature, whereas the Shannon entropy used by a communications engineer is in bits, essentially dimensionless. That difference is merely a matter of convention.
In classical thermodynamics, which is the study of thermodynamics from a purely empirical, or measurement point of view, thermodynamic entropy can only be measured by considering energy and temperature. Clausius' statement dS= δQ/T, or, equivalently, when all other effective displacements are zero, dS=dU/T, is the only way to actually measure thermodynamic entropy.
It is only with the introduction of statistical mechanics, the viewpoint that a thermodynamic system consists of a collection of particles and which explains classical thermodynamics in terms of probability distributions, that the entropy can be considered separately from temperature and energy.
Ultimately, the criticism of the link between thermodynamic entropy and information entropy is a matter of terminology, rather than substance.
Information entropy is exactly about semantic content, isn't it? It's how many bits can be lost before the information contained in the string loses its meaning? Yes or no? — Wayfarer
However one question that occurs to me about the purported equivalence of thermodynamic and logical entropy is that there is no concept of temperature or energy in the discipline of information entropy. — Wayfarer
As a really crude example, you could encode the same information in a string of granite boulders, each of which weighed 1 tonne, and also in bits on a hard drive. — Wayfarer
While a pigeon may very well be quite capable of being trained to pick out malignant formations, the pigeon doesn't recognize them as malignant formations. — creativesoul
There's a certain "objectivity" in a great art. It resonates for a culture. It concretizes that culture's ideals. ... We can see measure the proportions of a culture's ideal woman. But I don't see why we would measure our understanding of cultural ideals only in a quantifying manner. We don't just want to manipulate and predict. — t0m
I'm not defending the holy individual here, though I do think there are limits to this dissolution of the individual into the social. I'm really just trying to be accurate about the world. For me, however, this very notion of "world" is in question. I don't assume the world of natural science. To me that is a useful abstraction that exists within a more "primordial" notion of the world. We are in the world with others. But I don't think the spatial notion of objects next to other objects captures this "in-ness" or "with-others-ness." — t0m
I wasn't aware that this was a significant topic of discussion back then. — andrewk
