Agreed - and this means it is reasonable that we all perceive alike (or within a tolerance).If a person points out something to another person and that other person does the correct thing in the situation to interact with whatever then it would seem that we all perceive alike. — MountainDwarf
We don't "know" but we have no good reason to believe that is the case - because, as you said, we have evidence he perceives what we perceive.But, on the mental or psychological level how do we know that their perception of the world isn't more like a person with a sensory disorder?
We can be pretty damn sure, but we have to accept the fact that knowledge (in the strict sense) is impossible or at least rare, so we have to settle for justified beliefs.This is philosophy, and there is no proof for God, so we can't be sure.
Regarding solipsism: do you know anyone who is? — Relativist
We can be pretty damn sure, but we have to accept the fact that knowledge (in the strict sense) is impossible or at least rare, so we have to settle for justified beliefs. — Relativist
None of these questions have anything to do with solipsism. Solipsism is the absence of any other minds, not the existence of other minds that might experience the world differently. If anything that would be a form of realism.How do we know that we all perceive the same reality?
If a person points out something to another person and that other person does the correct thing in the situation to interact with whatever then it would seem that we all perceive alike. But, on the mental or psychological level how do we know that their perception of the world isn't more like a person with a sensory disorder? And what's to say that the person with the disorder isn't the one who actually sees things as they are? If one person sees the world as it is it does not guarantee that other people do, obviously. — MountainDwarf
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