There was a blind woman on the old pf for a while, who presumably did not see pixels, but still managed to reply to them. — unenlightened
If your meaning is idiosyncratic or controversial or even simply debatable then you need to highlight that immediately or people will respond to the regular meaning. And to expect them to respond to the unqualified statement as if it were the qualified one would be to expect them to accept your meaning. — Baden
Your meaning is exclusive. (And I'm talking about the meaning of the word "red" in general not as used in a specific context. Remember you said "to be red is just to look red". That's what I objected to not "to be red is just to look red when I'm talking about looking at red strawberries or whatever..." — Baden
Your meaning is exclusive. — Baden
Do you really still want to insist that when I look at a screen with no individuated pixels on it that it's nonsense for me to say "I don't see pixels, I see words". If no, we've nothing left to argue about. If yes, then all I have left to say is that that's a very unreasonable attitude. — Baden
No it is the scientific definition which is exclusive. It reduces "seeing red" to a particular sort of seeing red, whereas the common understanding of seeing red includes the scientific instance as well as others. — Metaphysician Undercover
What we say isn't always what we mean and anything can make sense given the right interpretation, so your question doesn't get to the issue. It can seem like nonsense to you or it can make sense to you, but I'm trying to go deeper than that.
If the words are not the pixels, then what are they? What's the difference between the number of pixels, which are black and a certain shape, and the words, which are black and a certain shape? There doesn't seem to be any difference at all, which, if so, would make that statement contradictory at face value. The only thing missing is the recognition of those black shapes as words, but what has that got to do with anything? — Sapientia
You remember how all this started, right? A contrived example. — Baden
I'm not conflating. I'm explicitly avoiding conflation by drawing a distinction between being red in the sense meant when we say "I see a picture of red strawberries" and in the scientific sense of "has a surface that reflects light at a wavelength of ~620–740 nm". — Michael
You said that "in this context", "appears" and "is" mean the same thing. But they obviously don't mean the same thing when people say things like "My body is not red, it just appears red, because you're looking at it through red tinted glasses". People don't mean to contradict themselves as if they were saying "My body is not red, it is just red" or "My body does not appear red, it just appears red". — Sapientia
So what did you mean when you said that a thing can appear red even if not (or vice versa)? — Michael
I mean something beyond appearance. I'm talking about the thing itself, at least inasmuch as I'm talking about what it is not. Whether it has no colour, or is a different colour, or has colour in a different sense to when we talk about how something appears - the point is, to define colour in the way that you and Hanover have done is problematic. — Sapientia
Indeed! And it is irrelevant that there were any pixels at all. The same meaning could be conveyed with brush strokes, finger-painting, or carved in tablets of stone. All that is relevant is the structure, not the substrate. Identical pixels, differently arranged, would convey a different meaning or no meaning. Which is why it makes sense to say that to see pixels is to see nothing; to see something is to see a structure, not pixels, but the relationships of pixels. Hence the old saw about not seeing the wood for the trees. — unenlightened
I see a brick bridge. — Sapientia
Looks more like pixels to me. — unenlightened
And what's that thing under the bridge of pixels that looks like an upside down bridge? Is it a bridge made of water? We're playing duck/rabbit aren't we? — unenlightened
If cups are not atoms, then what are they? This could go on all day... — Baden
Consider the example I gave earlier. When I watch TV I see Johnny Depp. Is the Johnny Depp I see the pixels, or is he the actor living in L.A.? — Michael
Then as I asked of Baden above, when you say "it appears red but isn't red" do the two instances of "red" mean/refer to different things or the same thing? — Michael
I mean something beyond appearance. I'm talking about the thing itself, at least inasmuch as I'm talking about what it is not. Whether it has no colour, or is a different colour, or has colour in a different sense to when we talk about how something appears - the point is, to talk of colour in the way that you and Hanover have done is problematic. — Sapientia
Let me put it another way Sapientia: with the cup/atoms example, you've already accepted the principle that you can see the whole without seeing the parts. Why you can't see that that binds you to admit that what I and un are saying is sensible and coherent is beyond me. — Baden
Well, to the extent that we're dividing the world between realism and anti-realism, the only thing of significance is that we admit to seeing the same thing, regardless of what it is. That is, whether the color is "really" in the strawberries or is imposed by the mind by something the fact that we're both seeing the same thing consistently speaks to some external reality. — Hanover
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