How are we to distinguish between a memory of past experience and an imagination thereof? — creativesoul
I think that attempting to qualify knowledge as direct and/or indirect is useless. — creativesoul
How are we to distinguish between a memory of past experience and an imagination thereof?
— creativesoul
Are you saying that you cannot differentiate between a memory (e.g. what you wrote to me just a few minutes ago) and an imagination (e.g. what you may write to me in the post)? Or are you asking by what mechanism do we know what is a memory and what is not? — Magnus Anderson
I think that attempting to qualify knowledge as direct and/or indirect is useless.
— creativesoul
So you think there is no difference between seeing that it is raining at some point t in time (direct knowledge) and assuming that it rains at some point t in time (indirect knowledge)? — Magnus Anderson
To say that there is "indirectness" is to imply that there could be "directness". What would it be like to have "direct" awareness or knowledge, as opposed to "indirect" awareness or knowledge?If I’m stating a fact, I’m speaking in signs.
And yes, I can mean to speak of the facts of the world. That is the realism in the indirectness. — apokrisis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.