↪Banno It is only via extroceptive sensation viz. seeing, hearing, touching, smelling, tasting of things, and interoceptive sensation of thoughts, feelings and emotions and so on that we come to know anything such as to call it real, isn't it? — Janus
You don't have your thoughts, you have sensations of your thoughts? — Banno
Not I; that was your doing. — Banno
So you are saying that one has a sensation of seeing the cat. — Banno
No I am saying that seeing the cat just is sensation (sensing) of the cat. — Janus
I suspect your analysis is fraught. — Banno
But you are trying to claim that seeing the cat just is sensing the cat... — Banno
You're beginning to sound like creativesoul! :razz: — Janus
I'm not saying anything like that the existence of the cat is dependent upon our seeing, or sensing it or whatever locution you want to use. — Janus
I'm not trying to claim anything other than "seeing the cat" and "sensing the cat" mean the same provided we are talking about visual sense of course. — Janus
My original point was just that we know anything that we might call "real" only via sensing or sensation of one kind or another. — Janus
...interoceptive sensation of thoughts, feelings and emotions and so on — Janus
What would be the difference between an illusion of consciousness and consciousness, or an illusion of an experience of color, etc. and just an experience of color? — Terrapin Station
For example, we perceive water on the road up ahead, but it turns out that there's no water in the road; it's just refracted light due to road/air temperature differences on a hot day. — Terrapin Station
Compare this to feeling hot or cold, which relates to the amount of energy the particles in a volume of space has. — Marchesk
Nothing is quite like we experience it. All vision shows things from an angle based on where our eyes are, rather than, say, from all directions at once. Everything is filtered, selected, interpreted. This would mean that nothing that we refer to is real. — Coben
Your obtuse use of language. Despite my having shown that it is an error to do so, you insist on treating sense and see as if they are the same. — Banno
Others might choose to pick appart this argument for you. — Banno
Is the only way to be aware of something, to sense it? That's the hidden assumption in your argument. Is it true — Banno
I don't know about you, but I am able to be reflexively aware of (at least some of) what I am presently experiencing, including the sense of experiencing of it. What could experience be other than either the sense or the idea of it? — Janus
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