I did not claim that the external sensible world exists unpercieved, and nor does he.
Not 'all' minds. Our minds. That is, those minds whose sensations represent the world they are sensations of to have outness. It appears external. He concludes that it is.
Have you actually read the principles or are those cherry picked quotes from a website?
Because if you actually read him he's very clear about this. Those quotes are taken out of context. Willfully. Read him and see.
He doesn't think your desk disappears when you stop perceiving it. He does think it can't exist unpercieved.
...it will be objected that from the foregoing principles it follows things are every moment annihilated and created anew. - In answer to all which, I refer the reader to What has been said in sect 3, 4, &c, [sections that go over how things do not exist except as sensations] all I desire he will consider whether be means anything by the actual existence of an idea distinct from its being perceived.
Was I doing that? Could you show where?Look, if you just take materialism for granted and then interpret data in light of it, then you are not doing philosophy. — Bartricks
Same reaction: did I do this? Where?Philosophy is about following reason, not using reason to rationalize your prejudices. — Bartricks
Right, that evidence. Other evidence may support it. Your argument would mean that appearance trumps any evidence. But science, for example, studied appearances and kept studying them and found a delay. They found appearances - observations - that led to understandings of perception, how brains work and so on. These brought into question the presentness. And, in fact, they could argue that they need not have a materialist model. A decision on substance. They followed observations and found delays in the appearances.If a certain worldview - materialism- implies it is not present, then it follows that the evidence implies materialism is false. — Bartricks
They are rejecting one interpretation of one kind of appearance because that is contradicted by a whole lot of other ones. Whatever the substance of reality. You would need to have an explanation within idealism, say, for why other appearances demonstrate a delay to dismiss their model.All you are doing is rejecting the evidence on the grounds that it conflicts with materialism. — Bartricks
You haven't answered my question - if there's a giant ball and you're tiny by comparison and are stood on a tiny bit of it, how would things look from there? Flat, yes? So there's no illusion. — Bartricks
Added to which you're assuming materialism in assuming that there's an extended ball out there in space. — Bartricks
But if - if - materialism is true and the earth appears flat when it is round (which it doesn't!), then that would be further evidence of materialism's falsity. — Bartricks
Anyway, how about addressing the argument in the OP? With which premise do you disagree? — Bartricks
However, "if a theory about reality implies that a whole load of our appearances are actually false, then that's a black mark against that theory. It is evidence - default evidence - that the theory is false." seems to apply to Berkley here, no? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I assume there is a typo confusing me here, but I can't figure out what it is or what you're trying to say. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I've read the Principles many times. What makes you think that? I've quoted the entire paragraphs in question. — Count Timothy von Icarus
>The desk can't exist when it is unperceived.
>You are alone in your office.
>You get up and leave, shutting the door.
>Your desk is no longer being perceived; it thus does not exist. — Count Timothy von Icarus
He says:
...it will be objected that from the foregoing principles it follows things are every moment annihilated and created anew. - In answer to all which, I refer the reader to What has been said in sect 3, 4, &c, [sections that go over how things do not exist except as sensations] all I desire he will consider whether be means anything by the actual existence of an idea distinct from its being perceived.
Or to paraphrase: "a thing existing without being perceived is meaningless and incomprehensible, less so than that things might come into existence as they are perceived." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Was I doing that? Could you show where? — Bylaw
I am not sure how you got to materialism is false. I get that there is an illusion of presentness. But that doesn't make materialism false. It would mean that there is an illusion about part of experience. Materialism could still be correct in the main. And in fact could simply contain this as one of the facets of materialism. — Bylaw
There’s no illusion that the world is flat? You have just accounted for the illusion that the world appears flat even though it’s a giant ball and isn’t flat. — Luke
So, basically, if science discovers that things are not as they appear, then that’s evidence of materialism’s falsity? According to what definition of materialism should things be as they appear? — Luke
I’ve already told you. You’ve provided no argument that things are exactly how they appear to be. Saying that this is the “default justification” is not an argument. If it was, then you should agree that the world is flat, just as it appears to be. — Luke
Appearances are default evidence in support of what they represent to be the case.
So, if event x appears to be present, that's default evidence that it is present.
If a certain theory about the world implies that x is not present, but past, then we have default evidence that the theory in question is false.
Surprise me - understand what I just said. — Bartricks
Anyway, how about addressing the argument in the OP? With which premise do you disagree?
— Bartricks
I’ve already told you. You’ve provided no argument that things are exactly how they appear to be. Saying that this is the “default justification” is not an argument. If it was, then you should agree that the world is flat, just as it appears to be.
— Luke
OP.
I don't think you know an argument from your elbow given you think if someone says "if p, then q" they are defending p! — Bartricks
We have a sensation of presentness. Do keep up. — Bartricks
Are your sensations mental states? — Bartricks
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