Do we need a different picture? — frank
The guy on the left. Take away the figure in his head, put in the cloud with the figure in it. The cloud indicates the figure is a representation of the object, the real object perceived directly but represented indirectly. — Mww
Notice there’s nothing indicating the operation of the senses, in the second illustration. And notice the figure is in the head, beyond sensory apparatus. This indicates the brain works with that which is not given from the senses, but rather, works with the representations for which the senses merely provide the occassion. — Mww
Personality is mediation, but mediation need not and seemingly ought not be understood to cast up a second image of the tree. — green flag
He just directly sees the tree. — frank
I don't think there are any representations in direct realism. — frank
..The world you take to be real is a collage of representations.
Is this view self undermining? — frank
Everyone directly sees the tree. — Mww
Maybe not, but there are representations necessarily. — Mww
The confusion is in what the terms themselves are meant to indicate. What we perceive is real directly; what our cognitive system works with, is real indirectly. — Mww
I think so. The brain which is supposed to generate the picture is part of the picture. All arguments for the brain throwing up a picture depend on features of the very picture which is 'derealized' and not be trusted. Brains (or the 'illusions' thereof) becomes the creations of brains (of their illusory selves). The sense organs become the creation of ... the sense organs. Note that the dreamer is part of the dream. It doesn't — green flag
There is and can be only one 'inferential-causal nexus.' — green flag
I think you're mistaken, frank. "Indirect realism" is an epistemological view (i.e. representationalism) — 180 Proof
distinction between direct and indirect realism — frank
What we perceive is real directly; what our cognitive system works with, is real indirectly.
— Mww
How do you know that? — frank
What does this mean? — frank
This is wrong. It's the indirect realist that actually gets it. Their view is not "faulty", rather they acknowledge that their view is a representation of the world-as-it-is.The question is: does indirect realism undermine itself? If you note in the image above, the indirect scenario has a guy seeing a faulty representation of the object. If this is his only access to the world, can he be an indirect realist without contradiction? In other words, if his view of the world is faulty (or at least possibly unreliable), why should he believe the impressions that led him to consider indirectness in the first place? — frank
they acknowledge that their view is a representation of the world-as-it-is. — L'éléphant
The guy on the left is an image of direct realism. He doesn't get a cloud. He just directly sees the tree — frank
But your comment does say something about this topic. You can quickly get lost with the representations that people see, except the tree is in their head, but it can't be, so what's that in the guy's head? Is it a representation or is it a tree? — frank
The contact with the rest of the world is direct. So how can one perceive indirectly a world that he is in direct contact with? — NOS4A2
Your eyes don't see things. Your ears don't hear things, and your fingers don't feel things. Your central nervous system sees, hears and feels. There clearly is an interface between the CNS and the world. — frank
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