Clarendon
flannel jesus
RussellA
My gripe is with direct realists — Clarendon
I think indirect realism is false as an account of what it is that we're perceiving in normal cases of perception. When I look at a ship in the harbour it is the ship, not a 'ship in the harbour-like' mental state that I am seeing if, that is, it is to be true that I'm perceiving the ship. — Clarendon
Maybe they could say that the experience - the mental state - is constitutive of the two place perceptual relation between the perceiver and the perceived. — Clarendon
So, crudely, I take indirect realists to think we're looking at pictures of the world and (the current crop) of direct realists to think we're looking through windows onto the world. — Clarendon
But it seems to run into problems accounting for hallucinations. — Clarendon
Michael
RussellA
Ordinary folks don't come across this type of problems in daily life. — Corvus
You have already perceived the colour of the postbox, and it appears "red" to you, and you are making your personal judgement "The postbox is red." — Corvus
The colour is not in your mind or in my mind. It is on the postbox — Corvus
jkop
..as the content of the mental state is what one is perceiving - and its content is 'about' a ship and this content is satisfied in the right kind of way - then one is directly perceiving it. — Clarendon
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
You've introduced "mental images" into your model in order to explain hallucination. — Esse Quam Videri
SophistiCat
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
I would tend to say that a hallucination is not the perception of an image, but the experience of imagery plus a false judgment. — Esse Quam Videri
I am wary of reifying mental images into objects of perception — Esse Quam Videri
NOS4A2
By contrast, the direct realist thinks that in the regular case, it is the ship that you are perceiving. They standardly try and keep the relevant mental state in the picture, they just think you're somehow looking through it to the ship. In the same way as if I look at the ship through a telescope I am looking at the ship 'through' the telescope and not looking at a telescope, the direct realist wants to say that some of our mental states - those involved in seeing and touching primarily - are akin to telescopes or windows. They are involved, but they enable one to see through them to the world, rather than themselves being the objects of perception.
So, crudely, I take indirect realists to think we're looking at pictures of the world and (the current crop) of direct realists to think we're looking through windows onto the world.
Michael
Because when I look at a perceiver there is nothing between him and the rest of the world. His eyes touch the light and atmosphere “directly”, for lack of a better term. — NOS4A2
Corvus
We are ordinary folks as far as seeing the postbox is concerned. We are not equipped with some super vision eyes, or we are not aliens from some other galaxies, I am sure.But then, we are not ordinary folks. — RussellA
I know I perceived the postbox as red, but I don't know what you perceive. The only reason I know you perceive it as red, is because you claim that you perceive it as red.However, this is regardless of what is in our minds. I may perceive the postbox as green and you may perceive the postbox as orange. But we both agree that in our language game “the postbox is red". — RussellA
Because some dude invented wave measuring meter, and scaled the numbers for 7000nm for colour red. No other reason than that. It could be 007nm or 2026nm. It is not some apriori idea or concept or number. It is just random reading that some dude attached to it, and published so the other folks would use it for saying the colour red in different way. You could say the Venus is a morning star when saw it in the dawn, or call it an evening star when saw it in the dinner time.In what sense is a wavelength of 700nm the colour red? — RussellA
What is a "mind-independent world"? Where is it?How do you know that colour exists in a mind-independent world? — RussellA
If the alien has been surfing the internet, and saw the colour red is wave length of 700nm, and thought it was true, then he would claim that wave length 700nm is colour red.. I know it by inductive reasoning.If an alien from the Andromeda Galaxy sees a wavelength of 700nm, are you saying that you know that they will also perceive the colour red? How do you know? — RussellA
NOS4A2
But our eyes don’t (usually) touch apples “directly”, yet direct realists claim that we see apples directly. So although there is ambiguity in what the word “direct” means in the context of “direct perception”, it clearly isn’t about our sense organs being in physical contact with the so-called object of perception. If it were that simple then direct realism (at least with respect to sight and hearing and smell) would have never been in consideration at all.
There is, so it is claimed, direct perception of distal objects even though there often is some third physical intermediary (light, air) between our sense organs and said objects.
Michael
The “object of perception” is the entire periphery and environment. That is what we see. An apple isn’t an “object of perception” because that would exclude everything else. I’m not sure why people exclude everything else in these discussions but I expect it is to help their arguments. — NOS4A2
At any rate, our eyes contact the light that bounces off an apple “directly”. — NOS4A2
RussellA
The only reason I know you perceive it as red, is because you claim that you perceive it as red. — Corvus
What is a "mind-independent world"? Where is it? — Corvus
If the alien has been surfing the internet, and saw the colour red is wave length of 700nm, and thought it was true, then he would. I know it by inductive reasoning. — Corvus
Esse Quam Videri
Then isn't a veridical experience the experience of imagery plus a true judgement? I believe Clarendon is just saying that the imagery (mental phenomena) that occurs when we hallucinate is indistinguishable from the imagery that occurs when we have veridical experiences. — Michael
Michael
Michael
So it may be that the sensory content is the same in both veridical and non-veridical cases. — Esse Quam Videri
flannel jesus
then can we trust that it is accurate, in the sense that the sensory content resembles the distal object — Michael
Michael
Banno
I believe most indirect realists believe — Michael
They're not intenced as such. Your claim concerned what "most indirect realists believe", but there is no evidence on which this might be based.Indirect realism is still realism, so I don’t understand the relevance of those references. — Michael
Michael
A direct realist ... holds that light is reflected from the ship, focused by the eye and incites certain neural pathways associated with things of that sort — Banno
... and that this process is what we call seeing a ship. — Banno
Banno
Percepts, in such an account, would be some stage in various layers of Markov blankets, just one of the levels of the internal states within the nested, hierarchical Markov blanket architecture. The perception is inside the Markov blanket, but not disconnected from what it outside. Crucially, The system does not “see” the percept; rather, the system sees by being in that state.We don’t really know what mental phenomena — or as scientists of perception call them, percepts — are, — Michael
Banno
Yep. The difference in science is not in the basic physiology. At least you now agree with me here.As does the indirect realist. — Michael
Scratch out "mind-independent" and you have it....but the direct realist argues that there's a much more substantial relationship; one in which information about themind-independentnature of the ship is given in the sensory experience... — Michael
Are you willing to claim that the character of experience is not determined, at least partly, by things in the world? Surely not."the phenomenal character of experience is determined, at least partly, by the direct presentation of ordinary objects" — Michael
Esse Quam Videri
You might not want to describe the latter as "seeing a mental representation" but it would still be the case that sensory content is a mental representation, and I would say that that's all it takes for indirect realism to be true. — Michael
We then have an epistemological problem to address. If sensory content is a mental representation then can we trust that it is accurate, in the sense that the sensory content resembles the distal object. — Michael
bongo fury
I don’t see how anyone can sensibly reject the existence of mental images. We might disagree about their nature, i.e are they reducible to neurological phenomena or are they non-physical emergent phenomena, etc., and we might disagree about their relationship and resemblance to distal objects, but they clearly do exist. — Michael
... we might disagree about their relationship and resemblance to distal objects, but they clearly do exist. — Michael
Clarendon
Clarendon
You've introduced "mental images" into your model in order to explain hallucination. This introduces an instability within your position that indirect realists have been capitalizing on for centuries in order to show that direct realism is untenable. — Esse Quam Videri
The problem is that you appear to be explaining indistinguishability in terms of identity within phenomenal experience (I.e. identical “appearing object”). This is ambiguous. If by "appearing object" you just mean an object within phenomenal experience - i.e. an object directly present to consciousness - then you've already collapsed into indirect realism since now the direct object of perception in both veridical and non-veridical experience is a phenomenal object. — Esse Quam Videri
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