Decisions still need to be made about the neural architecture, its width, depth, the neural activation responses on each layer, the anticipatory patterns of neurons and so on. — sime
So what would be more impressive is next step hardware that can also imagine particular cats based on its accumulated knowledge of felines. That would then be a fully two-way system that can start having sensory hallucinations, or dreams, just like me and you. The indirectness of its representational relationship with the real world would then be far more explicit, less hidden in the choice of training data, as well as the hierarchical design of its hardware. — @apokrisis
Realism is truly indirect as the brain is a hierarchical system attempting to predict its input. And the better practised it gets at that, the more it can afford to ignore "the real world". — apokrisis
Direct realism means awareness of mind-independent objects instead of some mental intermediary. — Marchesk
In philosophy of mind, naïve realism, also known as direct realism or common sense realism, is the idea that the senses provide us with direct awareness of objects as they really are. Objects obey the laws of physics and retain all their properties whether or not there is anyone to observe them.[1] They are composed of matter, occupy space and have properties, such as size, shape, texture, smell, taste and colour, that are usually perceived correctly.
In contrast, some forms of idealism claims that no world exists apart from mind-dependent ideas and some forms of skepticism say we cannot trust our senses. Naïve realism is known as direct as against indirect or representative realism when its arguments are developed to counter the latter position, also known as epistemological dualism;[2] that our conscious experience is not of the real world but of an internal representation of the world.
For the hierarchal system to be indirect, our perceptual awareness would be of the hierarchy instead of the object that's being detected using the hierarchy. — Marchesk
The wiki article offers a version of direct realism that is indistinct from naive realism... — creativesoul
Yep. And that is the point. The OP certainly comes off as an exercise in naive realism. You can't both talk about a mediating psychological machinery and then claim that is literally "direct". — apokrisis
There just cannot be a direct experience of the real world ... because we don't even have a direct connection to our real selves. Our experience of experience is mediated by learnt psychological structure. — apokrisis
Perception involves being able to see "that cat there", a judgement grounded in the matching development of a generalised capacity for categorising the world in terms of the long-run concept of "a cat" — apokrisis
Physiological sensory perception is prior to language on my view. — creativesoul
Physiological sensory perception is prior to language on my view. — creativesoul
Perception involves being able to see "that cat there", a judgement grounded in the matching development of a generalised capacity for categorising the world in terms of the long-run concept of "a cat" — apokrisis
Physiological sensory perception is prior to language on my view.
— creativesoul
Do you agree? — creativesoul
Well of course. Animals have minds and selfhood. Our models of perception have been built from experiments on cats and monkeys mostly. — apokrisis
Our models of perception have been built from experiments on cats and monkeys mostly. — apokrisis
Yep. And that is the point. The OP certainly comes off as an exercise in naive realism. You can't both talk about a mediating psychological machinery and then claim that is literally "direct". — apokrisis
I meant direct in the philosophical sense, where direct realists argue that perception is one of being directly aware of mind-independent objects out there in the world, and not some mentally constructed idea in the head. — Marchesk
That there is neurological/cognitive machinery for perceiving objects directly is understood. That machinery is only a problem if it generates a mediating idea. — Marchesk
What on earth are you talking about? — creativesoul
Perception involves being able to see "that cat there", a judgement grounded in the matching development of a generalised capacity for categorising the world in terms of the long-run concept of "a cat" — apokrisis
Physiological sensory perception is prior to language on my view.
— creativesoul
Do you agree? — creativesoul
Well of course. Animals have minds and selfhood. Our models of perception have been built from experiments on cats and monkeys mostly. — apokrisis
In what way is a wavelength really green? — apokrisis
How does your particular definition of direct realism account for hallucinations and illusions? — apokrisis
It's not. I would favor a direct scientific realist account of perception. But in any case, one could argue that smell, sound, color are how we experience the world directly. — Marchesk
But it occurred to me that if neural networks are a crude approximation for how our perception works, then they do favor realism about the patterns being detected. — Marchesk
A pigeon can make the same perceptual discrimination. Human perception is of course linguistically scaffolded and so that takes it to a higher semiotic leve — apokrisis
Your experience is part of the world, no?How could we argue that the world is coloured as we “directly experience” it when science assures us it is not? — apokrisis
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