The claim is that if the experience isn't veridical then your belief is false and that if your experience is veridical then your belief is just lucky. So the sceptic doesn't need to claim that there are or aren't any trees. He just argues that either way there isn't knowledge. — Michael
To be able to get beyond luck to actual knowledge you must somehow know that your experience is veridical, which according to the sceptic isn't possible. — Michael
or they can claim that they are defined as being the experience of an external and imaginary world respectively, in which case both types of experience fall under the umbrella term "dreaming" (even though they have other properties to distinguish them). — Michael
But how is skeptic supposed to prove that if my experience is veridical then it is lucky? I'm not quite sure what you mean by "luck" here, but at least in the literature it means roughly something like basing your belief on an epistemic policy which doesn't reliably track the truth. But what makes a policy reliable is its relation to the environment in which is is exercised, so that means that you must know some facts about the world in order to assess whether my perceptually based beliefs are reliable. If my capacity to visually distinguish trees from non-trees (in the environment in which I in fact live) is reliable, then my beliefs which I form on the basis of experience cannot be lucky when true - and the mere possibility the this very same policy could misled me in some other worlds in which there are no trees is irrelevant to the question whether by believes are lucky. — Fafner
How does it follow? Surely being awake doesn't fall under the umbrella of "dreaming" because it isn't... — Fafner
Sure, it's logically possible that life - by analogy - has the structure of a dream, but we really have no reason to suppose so (at least in our ordinary consciousness). Lacking a reason to suppose so means that doubting it would be irrational. — Agustino
That makes little sense though. Otherwise we'd always be doubting ourselves, and we wouldn't be able to get anything done. Quite the contrary, if we don't have any reason for doubt, then we shouldn't doubt.So the possibility that one's understanding is fundamentally delusional or deeply mistaken about the nature of reality should always be considered. Indeed I think that was the original impulse behind sceptical arguments. — Wayfarer
Otherwise we'd always be doubting ourselves, — Agustino
But given that I can't distinguish between the real painting and the forgery, in the case that my belief is true I'm just lucky. — Michael
I said that if "dreaming" is defined as being of an imaginary world, and if the experiences which we claim to be waking experiences are actually of an imaginary world, then those experiences aren't actually waking experiences but dreams. — Michael
But claiming something to be a waking experience is a different matter from it actually being a waking experience, so what you are describing is not an example of a waking experience that "falls under the umbrella of "dreaming" ", but just a plain instance of dreaming. — Fafner
because what does it mean to be awake if not to be in a state which is logically inconsistent with having a dream? — Fafner
Being in a state that is logically inconsistent with being asleep and dreaming does not imply that one can distinguish the two states, because the inconsistency does not stem from the difference in the mental state but from the fact whether one is awake or asleep. — BlueBanana
Being in a state that is logically inconsistent with being asleep and dreaming does not imply there is perceptual evidence of being in any state, because the inconsistency does not stem from the difference in the mental state or perceived reality but from the fact whether one is awake or asleep. — BlueBanana
But if this is the case, then contra the skeptic, being in the one state as opposed to the other does after all entail information about how the external world actually is, because the way things appear to you when you are awake usually matches very closely the way they really are – something which is plainly not the case (at least most of the time) when one is dreaming. — Fafner
And how does it logically prove that I don't know that I'm having a veridical experience from the fact that I can't recognize such a feature? — Fafner
Being in a state that is logically inconsistent with being asleep and dreaming does not imply there is perceptual evidence of being in any state, — BlueBanana
There is a hypothetical scenario where the other state does not entail that information, of which you'd be completely unaware of because it's your only source of how the things are. — BlueBanana
And how does it logically prove that I don't know that I'm having a veridical experience from the fact that I can't recognize such a feature? — Fafner
If you can't recognize it, how do you claim you know it? — BlueBanana
And how does it logically prove that I don't know that I'm having a veridical experience from the fact that I can't recognize such features? — Fafner
I don't think I'm conflating anything.You seem to be conflating. I'll set it out more clearly.
1. We have experiences of type A and experiences of type B.
2. We refer to experiences of type A as "wakefulness" and experiences of type B as "dreaming".
3. We claim that wakefulness is the experience of an external world and that dreaming is the experience of an imaginary world.
There are two ways for the sceptic to approach this. They can either claim that "wakefulness" and "dreaming" are defined by their referents, in which case our claim that wakefulness is the experience of an external world is false, or they can claim that they are defined as being the experience of an external and imaginary world respectively, in which case both types of experience fall under the umbrella term "dreaming" (even though they have other properties to distinguish them).
Nothing about this "destroys meaning" or "short circuits" language.
But again, this is just pedantry. The sceptic's claim is simply that we can't know that our experiences are of an external world, regardless of what we call them or think of them. You can't counter this by pointing to a dictionary. — Michael
it merely says that it's enough if you just have the right sort of evidence, but doesn't mention recognition. You have to add a further premise here. — Fafner
I don't think I'm conflating anything.
If experiences of type A are actually "dreaming" as well, then what grounds our concept of wakefulness? — Agustino
Experience.of Gods — Michael
Experience.or demons — Michael
Experience (we experienced both horns and horses).unicorns — Michael
Yes we do need to have had an experience of exteriority - something external to us - in order to ground the concept of external world.We don't need to have had an experience of an external world to have the concept of an experience of an external world. — Michael
Yes we do need to have had an experience of exteriority - something external to us - in order to ground the concept of external world — Agustino
What's your concept of a ghost? The concept of a ghost is a composed concept - composed of multiple atomic concepts, just like unicorns. Its atomic concepts, you have had an experience of all of them.So I must have seen a ghost because I have the concept of ghosts? That's wrong. I have the concept, but I've never seen one. — Michael
Yes. By disembodied you refer to things like light - light has no body (according to your own beliefs in the other thread). Think about what you imagine when you imagine a ghost.So I've had the experience of a disembodied thing? — Michael
Then you'd need to specify that point and also why you think your experience was of an external world then, and not now.Furthermore, at best your argument can only have you conclude that at some point you've had an external world experience. — Michael
Yes. By disembodied you refer to things like light - light has no body (according to your own beliefs in the other thread). Think about what you imagine when you imagine a ghost. — Agustino
Then you'd need to specify that point and also why you think your experience was of an external world then, and not now.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.