Clarendon
jkop
Tom Storm
Objections to direct realism are typically based on arguments from illusion or hallucination. — jkop
Banno
There's a lot going on in that. Why should we accept it?To perceive something is to be in unmediated contact with it. — Clarendon
Maybe not in those terms: Survey Results: Metaontology: heavyweight realism, anti-realism, or deflationary realism?I think most contemporary philosophers will want to describe themselves as direct realists of one sort or another. — Clarendon
J
Kant’s concern was more structural and general: he focused on how the mind contributes to experience. — Tom Storm
And we know that perceptual content is structured, that we see a chair, not bare colours and textures. — Banno
Banno
Picking up on these observations: By starting with the idea of "looking at a ship", we can be misled into believing that to perceive a ship is always to do so under that description.. A child has to learn, quite literally, to look at a ship -- to learn what to look for, how to recognize one, what the fuzzy cases are. Direct perception would instead be something like "bare colors and textures" -- a very unnatural thing for the human species to experience, past infancy. I think that to defend direct realism, you have to argue that those unmediated (?) experiences are what we perceive, full stop. — J
jkop
As a result, everything we experience: the phenomenal world, is filtered through these mental faculties. — Tom Storm
Paine
As in order to secure direct contact with the mind-external ship, the experience would surely have literally to contain the ship. It's not enough that it's 'about' a ship. A note about a ship is about a ship, but it can't thereby be a means by which we perceive a ship. A thought about a ship is about a ship, but again one can't perceive a ship by thinking about a ship. So it won't help at all to make a view 'direct' just to focus on the way in which a sensation is 'about' or 'of' a ship. The sensation would have to include the ship itself. — Clarendon
Tom Storm
Seeing is part of what's real. No need to split the world in one that we see and another that we supposedly never see. — jkop
Clarendon
Clarendon
Paine
Clarendon
Corvus
I am interested in hearing any objections to this 'proper' form of direct realism — Clarendon
Paine
Clarendon
Clarendon
Banno
When you see a boat, it' a boat that you see. If what you see is not a boat - if it is an illusion of an hallucination - then by that very fact what you see is not a boat.What's in dispute is what's perceived - the world itself or mental states — Clarendon
jkop
An idealist is a realist whenever he walks out the front door. — Tom Storm
RussellA
I think that direct realism 'proper' would have to be the view that perceptual relations have 2 and only 2 relata: the perceiver and the perceived......................I am interested in hearing any objections to this 'proper' form of direct realism — Clarendon
The mistake they accuse indirect realists of making is to confuse a 'vehicle' of awareness with an 'object' of awareness.........................Fair enough that the indirect realists are making a mistake. — Clarendon
Michael
To perceive something is to be in unmediated contact with it. I take that to be a conceptual truth that all involved in this debate will agree on. — Clarendon
With that in mind, a 'direct realist' is someone who holds that we are sometimes perceive the mind external world. That is, when I look at the ship I am directly aware of the ship itself. Thus, I perceive the ship.
This is as opposed to indirect realists who hold that we are only directly aware - and so only perceiving - mental states of our own, rather than the world out there. — Clarendon

flannel jesus
understand the distinction between direct and indirect realism to be better expressed by this picture: — Michael
Michael
Screenshot 2026-01-04 122803
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Screenshot 2026-01-04 122819
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flannel jesus
Michael
My question is, don't we have a scientifically agreed upon sequence of events from "there's an ice cream in front of you" to "you're experiencing the visual sensation of the ice cream in front of you"? Like, the matter that makes up the ice cream is there, it reflects or emits photons, some of those photons hit your eyes, your eyes send signals to your brain, your brain interprets those signals and the context they're in to create your full visual-spacial-objectoriented experience of the ice cream and the space it exists in. — flannel jesus
flannel jesus
Michael
so isn't all that answered in the physical description of the sequence of events? — flannel jesus
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