Awareness is not judgement. Being aware of both "this" and "horse" is not judging <this is a horse>, but we do so judge, because we confuse the joint awareness of the two different contents with that of a single object that is both this and a horse. For <this is a horse> means that the identical thing that evokes <this> is evoking <horse>. — Dfpolis
Stepping back, saying "essence of truth is the truth of essence," seems rather monadistic. I mean that a great part of truth is not about the essence of any one thing, but more ecological -- about how things relate and interact -- and we can never discover that except by observing actual relations and interactions. — Dfpolis
I think your "actualization of a present intelligibility" works if you allow the addition of "for a present use"; "use" needing be no more than the bringing to consciousness of the knowledge itself. — tim wood
Sometimes we have no idea of a potential use. We just encounter being. We may take joy in it -- or we may not. I understand your extension of "use," but it seems perilous in an era of soundbites -- where "use" is liable to be separated from your extension. — Dfpolis
Stimulus, synthesis, and an act of judgment. — tim wood
I have not addressed it, but there are two kinds of knowledge we have been talking about. — Dfpolis
I'm still finding it very unclear what it is that you think you are arguing — apokrisis
Maybe you are making the contrast between the roles played by coherence and correspondence in theories of truth. — apokrisis
there is the certainty (and doubt) that results from some generalised state of coherent belief. We have a world view that seems to work in reliable fashion. — apokrisis
We have a pragmatic set of interpretive habits that do a good enough job of understanding the world. This is what intelligibility feels like. — apokrisis
The world is experienced as having a stable rational structure - where dogs are dogs, horses are horses, the house on the corner is still blue like the last time we saw it, and we aren't concerned about the possibility it may have been repainted or knocked down in the last few days. — apokrisis
So when talking about Descartes, he does seem to be claiming that every fact is merely a particular, and so suffers the challenge of correspondence. — apokrisis
It conflicts rather too violently with the rationality we find in knowledge as generalised correspondence. — apokrisis
Life for us would remain the same despite it being "a grand illusion". — apokrisis
it remains important to see beyond the naive realism of the kind of "unity" of mind and world you appeared to be pushing. — apokrisis
In psychological terms, the mind only appears to represent the world. The world is merely an image. And that creates a troubling epistemic gap. — apokrisis
globalised coherence creates a general certainty about what even counts as actually possible or actually likely. — apokrisis
Perception begins with a state of reasonable expectation. — apokrisis
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