This seems like the perfect time to allow Kant to place apo's latest/most recent ad hom's in proper perspective. — creativesoul
Once again, rather than focus upon the substance of the post (that time it was Kant) some would rather talk about others on a personal level... — creativesoul
It's not redundant Sap. Greater understanding results from being able to talk about something in more than one way. It increases the ability of a reader to relate. — creativesoul
It's not redundant Sap. Greater understanding results from being able to talk about something in more than one way. It increases the ability of a reader to relate. — creativesoul
Pleonasm (/ˈpliːənæzəm/; from Greek πλεονασμός (pleonasmós), from πλέον (pleon), meaning 'more, too much') is the use of more words or parts of words than are necessary or sufficient for clear expression: for example black darkness or burning fire. Such redundancy is, by traditional rhetorical criteria, a manifestation of tautology. However, pleonasm may also be used for emphasis, or because the phrase has already become established in a certain form.
...Some pleonastic phrases, when used in professional or scholarly writing, may reflect a standardized usage that has evolved or a meaning familiar to specialists but not necessarily to those outside that discipline. Such examples as "null and void", "terms and conditions", "each and every" are legal doublets that are part of legally operative language that is often drafted into legal documents.
...as is the case with any literary or rhetorical effect, excessive use of pleonasm weakens writing and speech; words distract from the content. Writers wanting to conceal a thought or a purpose obscure their meaning with verbiage.
Indeed, the grand and only use of examples, is to sharpen the judgement.
That was what was written originally. — creativesoul
An astute reader can look to the above example that apo has somehow judged to be rightfully applicable to the situation at hand, and clearly see that it is an example that doesn't apply to what I've written. Kant's explanation looms large... — creativesoul
belief(that — creativesoul
I'm calling you out for not accepting those rules — apokrisis
Vanishingly constant or constantly vanishing? — Janus
This is too rich. Pots and kettles. I'm not interested in your rhetoric apo. — creativesoul
The correct answer is both, depending upon the notion of perception. If it is based upon a minimalist criterion, then it would not involve language, and it would be a more physical notion. If it is based upon a criterion that requires complex linguistic notions, including awareness of our own fallibility, then our perception would most certainly be indirect, because it would amount to the affects/effects of one's worldview and would be a more mental notion. — creativesoul
So, with regard to the topic at hand...
The question and/or issue revolves around whether or not our perception is mediated by our mental ongoings or whether it is not.
The correct answer is both, depending upon the notion of perception. If it is based upon a minimalist criterion, then it would not involve language, and it would be a more physical notion. If it is based upon a criterion that requires complex linguistic notions, including awareness of our own fallibility, then our perception would most certainly be indirect, because it would amount to the affects/effects of one's worldview and would be a more mental notion. — creativesoul
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
Only if it generates an idea that mediates the physiological sensory perception itself...
Doing that first requires becoming aware of such a thing. Language is required for becoming aware of one's own physiological sensory perception. Language is not required for being born with neurological/cognitive machinery(physiological sensory perception).
Thus, drawing correlations, associations, and/or connections between 'objects' of physiological sensory perception can result in a mediating idea and still pose no problem whatsoever for a direct realist like myself. The attribution and/or recognition of causality is one such correlation/association/connection.
One can learn about what happens when one touches fire without ever having generated an idea that mediates one's own physiological sensory perception. One cannot learn what happens when one touches fire without attributing/recognizing causality. — creativesoul
Because indirect perception is mediated,... — creativesoul
So, we arrive at the following conclusion:No creature without written language has indirect perception. — creativesoul
Because indirect perception is mediated,...
— creativesoul
Perception isn’t mediated. It is the mediation. — apokrisis
Because indirect perception mediates, whatever mediation is existentially contingent upon, so too is indirect perception. Mediating requires metacognition. Thus, indirect perception requires metacognition. Metacognition requires written language. Thus, indirect perception requires written language. So, we arrive at the following conclusion:No creature without written language has indirect perception. — creativesoul
technical with object Bring about (a result such as a physiological effect)
‘the right hemisphere plays an important role in mediating tactile perception of direction’
Perception isn’t mediated. It is the mediation.
— apokrisis — apokrisis
What's being mediated? — creativesoul
Your experience of the world. That is why folk were talking about indirect vs direct perception. — apokrisis
Because perception mediates, whatever mediation is existentially contingent upon, so too is perception. Mediating requires metacognition. Thus, perception requires metacognition. Metacognition requires written language. Thus, perception requires written language. So, we arrive at the following conclusion:No creature without written language has perception. — creativesoul
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