we don't find anything at all which would support a gaze travelling from our eyes into the world around us. — dukkha
Again the point here is that there is no outgoing process here. It's just sound waves travel into the ear, and then nerve impulses travel into the brain — dukkha
I struggle to see how this could be possible. It's certainly not supported by any of our scientific observations. — dukkha
I don't think that it has ever been suggested that a 'gaze travels' or that anything 'travels out' from the ear to the source of sound. So why would the fact that this doesn't happen constitute a problem? — Wayfarer
What do you make of the seeming contradiction between the physiology of our sensory systems, and our sensory perceptions? — dukkha
I don't think that it has ever been suggested that a 'gaze travels' or that anything 'travels out' from the ear to the source of sound. So why would the fact that this doesn't happen constitute a problem? — Wayfarer
Even though physiologically all that's detect is a change in the pressure in the cochlea. How can I perceive the sound to be where the telephone is? i — dukkha
If you take new born kittens with perfectly working eyes (biologically), but do not give them the chance to move around their environment (so as to integrate movement and the significance of what they see), they remain effectively blind. — StreetlightX
However, when we study the physiology of the visual system, its function appears completely contradictory to our experience of seeing, — dukkha
if this visual perception is actually located within a brain (your perceived visual field is located within a brain), then you must commit to the position that your entire body itself (and the world around it, and the people you interact with) are already within a brain. — dukkha
It seems to me that I read (once upon a time) a statement that the ancients thought that vision was caused by something like a beam of light from the eye. — Bitter Crank
Take vision for example. My visual perception feels as if I am focusing my eyes upon objects which exist 'out there' in the world around me. — dukkha
This question is about cognitive science. It has to do with stereoscopic sound resolution, i.e. your ears are several inches apart, your brain triangulates the sound to provide an approximation. It's not that good in h. sapiens, but in owls and bats, it's phenomenal - enables owls to pinpoint the heartbeat of a field mouse from hundreds of meters away, and bats to catch mosquitoes on the wing. — Wayfarer
These are awesome questions, but there's alot of presuppositions behind them need to be unpacked, and in some cases, perhaps reworked altogether. As a first clue to where things might be badly put, recall that our sensory world is always - if the science is right - 'cross-modal'. That is, we can't separate out sight, smell, touch, movement and hearing and treat them on their own terms without doing violence to the phenomenology of perception. Perception always occurs in an integrated 'perceptual field' in which all our senses are brought to bear on a particular 'scene'. One way to think about this is to turn around the usual intuition that our senses are individual and 'additive' (perception = sight + smell + movement, etc). Rather, one begins with an integrated perceptual field from which the individual senses can be progressively distinguished (to close one's eyes is to 'subtract' sight from a more originary sensory plenum). — StreetlightX
So it's not quite right to think about our 'biological sensory organs' in isolation from a integrated field of living as such; nerve optics and so on are the biological mechanisms by which perception takes place, but they do not, on their own, explain perception, an account of which would need to take into account the whole developmental history of a living being in an environment in which it lives. Perception works in the service of significance, not in the service of perceiving 'things'. — StreetlightX
Another way to approach this is to think not in terms of 'lines' where (say) vision shoots out into the world or vice versa, but in terms of a perpetual circuit in which both body and world are implicated in with respect to a life as it is lived. Perception is not a matter of registering static images on a silver plate that is the brain, it is a matter of living, of a dynamism in which significance and movement are primary to it's understanding.We do not 'model' the world 'in the brain'; we respond to it by being in it, moving through it, reacting to the significances that it presents to us. — StreetlightX
The reason for this is that we are essentially meaning-seeking beings (or rather, 'significance seeking beings'). We perceive not in order to simply see, hear and touch objects, sounds and textures (this is a very abstract way to think about things, despite it being intuitive), but in order to negotiate an environment around which to move, to avoid threats and danger, cultivate safety and food, respond to sadness or joy. In others words we 'see' meanings no less than we see 'things' — StreetlightX
We do not 'model' the world 'in the brain'; we respond to it by being in it, moving through it, reacting to the significances that it presents to us. —
Is the world our (perceived) bodies move through, produced by a brain/sensory organs? — dukkha
The shoes are not 'in-itself' things to be worn on feet. That's just my interpretation of them. As in, how the world exists 'in-itself' is not dependent on my specific history. So, isn't some sort of indirect realism entailed here? Otherwise you'd have two people directly seeing the shoes in two completely different ways. How would this work? — dukkha
This by the way is how to understand Kant's distinction between 'discursive' and 'intellectual' intuition: Kant's theory of the in-itself has nothing to do with the vulgar idea that there is a world that is 'beyond' perception in the sense that it has perceptual qualities that we cannot know. Rather, the in-itself is aperceptual, it has qualities which have nothing to do with perception, and that is why it will remain a 'thing-in-itself'. It is not that there are parts of the world that are 'beyond knowledge', as if a superior, non-human, or divine knowledge could grasp it, but that the very idea of knowledge is no longer applicable to certain aspects of the world, that is is a simple 'category error' to say we can know such and such beyond our experience of it. This is why Kant remained an empirical realist no less than he was a 'transcendental idealist'). — StreetlightX
It is not that there are parts of the world that are 'beyond knowledge', as if a superior, non-human, or divine knowledge could grasp it, but that the very idea of knowledge is no longer applicable to certain aspects of the world, that is is a simple 'category error' to say we can know such and such beyond our experience of it. This is why Kant remained an empirical realist no less than he was a 'transcendental idealist'). — StreetlightX
I have just re-read the OP, and this is the most anti-science thing I have ever read. I know philosophy isn't enamored of science, but this is like someone raised by wolves making up their own ideas of how the human body (and world) works. I hate to be so negative, but this is bizarre. And everyone responding seems to be nodding their heads, going, "Yup. Eye-beams."
What am I missing? — Real Gone Cat
That's very interesting, but I have a hard time reconciling it with ontological considerations. So if I adopt scientific realism, and I'm wondering about the nature of black holes, then is there something about black holes which can't be known? That we can't say at all what black holes are, independent of our astronomical experiences?
Such that advances in theoretical physics about the interior of black holes will only ever be about black holes in relation to how we humans perceive and think about the world? That there is something apart from that which is what black holes are, but can't be understood by us, or even aliens (based on how the perceive and think), or our machine overlords in the future?
Is the nature of black holes inherently unknowable? — Marchesk
(This by the way is how to understand Kant's distinction between 'discursive' and 'intellectual' intuition: Kant's theory of the in-itself has nothing to do with the vulgar idea that there is a world that is 'beyond' perception in the sense that it has perceptual qualities that we cannot know. Rather, the in-itself is aperceptual, it has qualities which have nothing to do with perception, and that is why it will remain a 'thing-in-itself'. It is not that there are parts of the world that are 'beyond knowledge', as if a superior, non-human, or divine knowledge could grasp it, but that the very idea of knowledge is no longer applicable to certain aspects of the world, that is is a simple 'category error' to say we can know such and such beyond our experience of it. This is why Kant remained an empirical realist no less than he was a 'transcendental idealist'). — StreetlightX
What's causing our perceptions is a 'thing-in-itself' (if it's perceptual, then our sense organs are literally the cause of their own existence), but if knowledge doesn't apply to 'things-in-themselves', then it makes no sense to say they cause our perceptions. So the whole notion of perception having some cause dissolves. — dukkha
Unless you're hallucinating the present cat is the cause of sensing/seeing a cat. — jkop
This act produces sensation, perhaps the seeing of a cat. — Metaphysician Undercover
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