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
What then did you mean by "perception" in the first quote above? — creativesoul
A pigeon can make the same perceptual discrimination. Human perception is of course linguistically scaffolded and so that takes it to a higher semiotic level. — apokrisis
In summary, the basic features of object category learning in pigeons are the following. First, pigeons can learn a variety of complex object categories and transfer this learning to novel objects. Second, pigeons can flexibly classify the same object according to different criteria (e.g., pseudocategories and superordinate categories). Third, pigeons extract a rich variety of visual properties from photographic images and use them in combination to learn the structure of object categories. Finally, pigeons learn common abstract representations for all members of the same trained category.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4195317/
In the study, 16 pigeons were trained to detect cancer by putting them in a roomy chamber where magnified biopsies of possible breast cancers were displayed. Correctly identifying a growth as benign or malignant by pecking one of two answer buttons on a touchscreen earned them a tasty 45 milligram pigeon pellet. Once trained, the pigeons’ average diagnostic accuracy reached an impressive 85 percent. But when a “flock sourcing” approach was taken, in which the most common answer among all subjects was used, group accuracy climbed to a staggering 99 percent, or what would be expected from a pathologist. The pigeons were also able to apply their knowledge to novel images, showing the findings weren’t simply a result of rote memorization.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/using-pigeons-to-diagnose-cancer/
This is psychology's most celebrated example of how similar animals are to humans in their ability to go beyond "direct experience" to categorise their experience abstractly. — apokrisis
While a pigeon may very well be quite capable of being trained to pick out malignant formations, the pigeon doesn't recognize them as malignant formations. — creativesoul
I'm not confusing anything. I'm just trying to ask a question and to show you the consequences of your answer. If you don't want to answer because you fear the consequences, just say so.You are confusing the epistemic issue of direct vs indirect realism with the ontological commitments I might then argue concerning the mind~world issue. — apokrisis
While a pigeon may very well be quite capable of being trained to pick out malignant formations, the pigeon doesn't recognize them as malignant formations. — creativesoul
Well, that is stating the bleeding obvious. The point of the pigeon research is that animal brains can in fact categorise to quite a human degree ... when linguistically-scaffolded in human fashion. — apokrisis
So that shows both that our biology of perception has much more in common than most might expect, but also that language then really makes a particular kind of difference we can add to the discussion.
They become aware of and recognize the differences between kinds of cell structures. — creativesoul
All of it also clearly lends support to direct perception. — creativesoul
They become aware of and recognize the differences between kinds of cell structures.
— creativesoul
Does that not cover perception? — apokrisis
All of it also clearly lends support to direct perception.
— creativesoul
Really? After wasting so much time on irrelevancies, you seem to have forgotten to address the OP.
However, it seems apparent that you and I have incommensurate notions regarding what counts as perception. — creativesoul
However, it seems apparent that you and I have incommensurate notions regarding what counts as perception.
— creativesoul
You’d have to explain how. I’ve asked in the past and you haven’t explained. — apokrisis
I’ve made the point that human language changes the way we are aware of the world deeply. Yet also we share the same basic brain biology.
So for instance, I am happy to talk about pigeons recognising, but I wouldn’t believe they can recollect. They have memories and can categorise experience. But they don’t have the structure of language that would allow for a narrative or autobiographical use of those memories. — apokrisis
Likewise they would have anticipatory imagery. They could search their environment with an expectation in mind. But not having language, they couldn’t have what we mean by imagination - the ability to generate mental imagery that is not closely tied to what the world around demands. — apokrisis
What bugs me about your approach in this thread is that you keep using your own weird neologisms without proper explanation and you fail to provide grounding citations for whatever position you think you take. So it is hard to discuss the issues with you rationally. You are coming across as a crackpot. Yet I also think you are trying to make the same point as I also make. So that remains confusing. — apokrisis
I also think you are trying to make the same point as I also make. So that remains confusing. — apokrisis
Nothing I've said requires citations. I'm not referencing anyone else's work. — creativesoul
So, in order for either of us to understand the other, we must understand what is meant when either of us use the term perception. — creativesoul
Simply put, on my view, perception is not equivalent to mental correlations. Whereas you fail to draw and maintain that distinction, I draw and maintain that perception is one necessary but insufficient element of mental ongoings. You're not alone though. It is an historical shortcoming pervading the whole of philosophy, philosophy of mind (psychology) notwithstanding. — creativesoul
However, I would note that the notion of "recollect" above presupposes recollecting to someone or something. — creativesoul
But for that notion to have any bite, in order for it to be robust, we must have a relatively good grasp upon what our awareness of the world is without language. — creativesoul
If they have anticipatory imagery, then they must have the ability to generate such imagery. — creativesoul
I suggest that you spend less time thinking about me personally and more time addressing the substance of my posts... — creativesoul
Our methodological approaches stand in stark contrast to one another however. — creativesoul
Specifically speaking, the framework will limit or delimit what can coherently be said according to it. — creativesoul
From the first Critique, here's Kant on judgment...
Introduction: Of the Transcendental Faculty of judgement in General.
If understanding in general be defined as the faculty of laws or rules, the faculty of judgement may be termed the faculty of subsumption under these rules; that is, of distinguishing whether this or that does or does not stand under a given rule (casus datae legis). General logic contains no directions or precepts for the faculty of judgement, nor can it contain any such. For as it makes abstraction of all content of cognition, no duty is left for it, except that of exposing analytically the mere form of cognition in conceptions, judgements, and conclusions, and of thereby establishing formal rules for all exercise of the understanding. Now if this logic wished to give some general direction how we should subsume under these rules, that is, how we should distinguish whether this or that did or did not stand under them, this again could not be done otherwise than by means of a rule. But this rule, precisely because it is a rule, requires for itself direction from the faculty of judgement. Thus, it is evident that the understanding is capable of being instructed by rules, but that the judgement is a peculiar talent, which does not, and cannot require tuition, but only exercise. This faculty is therefore the specific quality of the so-called mother wit, the want of which no scholastic discipline can compensate.
For although education may furnish, and, as it were, engraft upon a limited understanding rules borrowed from other minds, yet the power of employing these rules correctly must belong to the pupil himself; and no rule which we can prescribe to him with this purpose is, in the absence or deficiency of this gift of nature, secure from misuse.*...
...A physician therefore, a judge or a statesman, may have in his head many admirable pathological, juridical, or political rules, in a degree that may enable him to be a profound teacher in his particular science, and yet in the application of these rules he may very possibly blunder--either because he is wanting in natural judgement (though not in understanding) and, whilst he can comprehend the general in abstracto, cannot distinguish whether a particular case in concreto ought to rank under the former; or because his faculty of judgement has not been sufficiently exercised by examples and real practice.
Indeed, the grand and only use of examples, is to sharpen the judgement. For as regards the correctness and precision of the insight of the understanding, examples are commonly injurious rather than otherwise, because, as casus in terminis they seldom adequately fulfil the conditions of the rule. Besides, they often weaken the power of our understanding to apprehend rules or laws in their universality, independently of particular circumstances of experience; and hence, accustom us to employ them more as formulae than as principles. Examples are thus the go-cart of the judgement, which he who is naturally deficient in that faculty cannot afford to dispense with.
[*Footnote: Deficiency in judgement is properly that which is called stupidity; and for such a failing we know no remedy. A dull or narrow-minded person, to whom nothing is wanting but a proper degree of understanding, may be improved by tuition, even so far as to deserve the epithet of learned. But as such persons frequently labour under a deficiency in the faculty of judgement, it is not uncommon to find men extremely learned who in the application of their science betray a lamentable degree this irremediable want.]
This seems/appears like the perfect time to allow/permit Kant to place/put apo's latest/most recent ad hom's in proper/rightful perspective and/or point of view.
Join in there apo. — creativesoul
Although, I do the same thing when I want to express the same thing in multiple ways, and/or show different ways to say much the same thing... — creativesoul
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