Esse Quam Videri
Michael
RussellA
Sensory experience supplies data that constrains inquiry, but it does not supply premises from which judgments about the world are inferred. — Esse Quam Videri
Inference requires premises that are truth-apt — Esse Quam Videri
So either stage two is truth-apt, in which case it already is a judgment and your staged model collapses, or it is not truth-apt, in which case the claim that stage-three judgments are inferred from it does not follow. — Esse Quam Videri
What I deny is that mediation entails inferential grounding. — Esse Quam Videri
The epistemic work is done at the level of judgement itself, not by moving outward from inner representations. — Esse Quam Videri
So the disagreement isn’t about whether the “bridge of the senses” must be crossed — it’s about what crossing that bridge amounts to: inferential reconstruction from inner items, or norm-governed judgment constrained by experience but not inferentially derived from it. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
hypericin
...the blanket is only causally isolating. Information flows across it, but that does not lead to epistemic confinement. The organism’s perceptual capacities are attuned to environmental states across the blanket; perception is an interaction spanning the boundary, not an encounter with an inner surrogate. What is perceived is the ship, not a mental image that stands in for it. — Banno
refusing to accept a Cartesian picture in which perception must either be inner and certain or outer and inferential. — Banno
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
I think the issue is that your formulation of (1) already presupposes a particular conception of justification — namely, that perceptual beliefs are justified if and only if the world is “as it appears”. — Esse Quam Videri
RussellA
But inference requires propositional, truth-apt premises. — Esse Quam Videri
That leaves you with a dilemma:
If “I am seeing orange” is truth-apt, then it is already a judgment and your staged model collapses.
If it is not truth-apt, then it cannot function as a premise, and the claim that stage-three judgments are inferred from it does not follow. — Esse Quam Videri
This is why I’ve insisted that perceptual judgments are not inferred from sensory contents — Esse Quam Videri
On my view, representation, truth, and epistemic authority belong at the level of judgment, not sensation. — Esse Quam Videri
o the issue isn’t whether the senses mediate our contact with the world — I agree they do — but whether that mediation is inferential and representational, or whether judgment is norm-governed and answerable to how things are without being derived from inner items. That is the point at which we diverge. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Perhaps, but then by "perceptual belief" I mean "a belief that the world is as it appears". — Michael
Michael
By perceptual belief I mean something more ordinary and less theory-laden: they are beliefs about objects and states-of-affairs that are formed in ordinary perceptual contexts (e.g. “there is a ship”, “the screen is emitting orange light”, “the umbrella is wet”). — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
One simply judges that there is a ship, and that judgment is assessed over time by its coherence with other judgments, its responsiveness to further experience, and its success or failure in inquiry. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
The mere possibility of global deception does not by itself show that perception is indirect, nor that the world is not as it appears. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
Hanover
We ought accept that they do not directly see their shared environment. — Michael
Michael
Esse Quam Videri
Michael
Esse Quam Videri
Banno
I again was not able to follow. The fact that mind and world interact I hope we both take as granted, and so ought be suspicious of any doctrine of substances that appears to impede this interaction.This is to mean, if you can jettison the distinction between mental states and external states on the grounds it makes reality easier to comprehend, regardless of whether it comforts with actuality, then you've made it no less logical to insert other preferences into this mix. — Hanover
Banno
Banno
RussellA
Your reply nicely clarifies the remaining disagreement. — Esse Quam Videri
Epistemic norms are conditions for the possibility of inquiry, not constituents of reality. To say that judgment is norm-governed independently of experience is not to say the world is mental, but that knowing has irreducible normative structure.@Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
RussellA
The indirect realist sees the causal chain and says that perception is indirect. The direct realist sees the chain and point out that the chain is how we know about the ship. — Banno
RussellA
First, when I speak of normativity, I am not talking about moral norms (e.g. “evil is bad”), but epistemic normativity: truth, falsity, correctness, and justification. To make a judgment is to take on a set of epistemic responsibilities. That normativity is constitutive of judgment, not something inferred from experience or imposed by the will, and it is independent of any moral “ought”. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
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