In what sense is Idealism less explanatory? In what sense less ad hoc? In what sense less parsimonious? — PossibleAaran
The more general point is that there are many things that we continuously perceive without realising it, by which I mean that we would notice and pay attention if they were to suddenly cease. Other examples are a faint drone of an electric motor, which we only notice when it suddenly stops. Or one of the many instruments in a thick 'wall of sound' musical arrangement of a song, which one doesn't notice until the instrument stops, and thereby subtly alters the texture of the music. — andrewk
But he might not feel anything as well. Experience just ends. — Marchesk
Well Idealism obviously ad hoc because it's inventing a whole different understanding of reality from the ordinary one. That's the less parsimonious bit. — gurugeorge
That would take us back to the line of thought about doubt requiring reason to doubt. Is there a reason to doubt the ordinary story? — gurugeorge
Here is the simple reason to doubt the ordinary story which I have stressed already. The ordinary story includes the proposition that some things exist unperceived. There is no reliable method at all, for determining whether the paper in the drawer exists unperceived, and this same problem occurs for the vast majority of objects we perceive. In that way, the belief that things exist unperceived is sheer speculation. This doesn't depend on the argument from illusion. — PossibleAaran
Pretty sure you're wrong about this. — Marchesk
You're not familiar with cosmology, are you? — Metaphysician Undercover
we can depict the world mathematically — Marchesk
I can see that the paper existed when the camera took its picture, but does the paper exist now? The camera is nothing more than an extension of the times at which I can view the paper; it cannot show that the paper exists unviewed tout court — PossibleAaran
Mathematical equations are meaningless symbolics until observations are substituted for variables. — Rich
There is always some Mind (perspective) involved when observing and trying to understand or predict behavior(habits) in the universe. — Rich
I believe that there are items which exist when neither I nor anyone else is perceiving them. Examples of such items are pieces of paper, seas, mountains and apartment blocks. I believe it, but how could I possibly know it? — PossibleAaran
The camera is nothing more than an extension of the times at which I can view the paper; it cannot show that the paper exists unviewed tout court — PossibleAaran
Would that not establish the existence of the unperceived paper, at least every nanosecond (or however many nanoseconds got turned into cents)? — Marchesk
What reason is there to doubt that the coffee I just made is still on the kitchen bench where I left it? I can't see it, and there is no one else out there...
Doubt needs reasons, too. — Banno
That's true, but the salient question, given that objects always seem to remain reliably where we last encountered or put them is whether, in light of that obvious fact, it is more plausible to think that they persist regardless of whether we are perceiving them, or to think that they do not. For sure there can be no absolute proof, no absolute certainty; but why does that matter to you? — Janus
The reason for the doubt is the one I stated in the OP. That is, the existence of the coffee when unperceived is something that nobody has any reliable means of determining to be true. No reliable means at all. The belief is (apparently) akin to the belief that there is a unicorn on mars. There is just no reliable way to tell. Is that not reason enough for doubt? (Incidentally, I am hoping that the belief about the coffee is not like the unicorn on mars belief, and that it can be reliably determined, but I've yet to see how it could be). — PossibleAaran
So, the belief that the coffee exists unperceived isn't one that can be reliably established by any method at all. It is like the belief that there is a unicorn on mars. — PossibleAaran
1. They're still around when we do perceive them again.
2. They can undergo change in our absence.
3. They can influence things we do perceive.
4. The perceived world is dependant on the unperceived for being the way it is.
5. We have no reason to suppose that things stop existing when we're not around. — Marchesk
That everything is connected to everything else, so all the examples given here of things that are unperceived, followed by the question 'do they then exist?' are not unperceived. They are perceived, so the question is moot.But what is the significance of this for our topic? — PossibleAaran
One thought which comes to mind is that if you are happy with speculation in the absence of counter evidence, then any and every speculation no matter how wild is acceptable. — PossibleAaran
What I should have realized before was that the spirit of Idealism as it was expressed by W T Stace isn't merely that when I am not literally looking at the paper, there is no way to tell whether it exists. Rather, when I normally suppose that the paper exists when unperceived, I suppose that it exists in such a way that its existence outstrips any mode of observation. Stace's Idealism springs from the claim that there is no way to reliably determine that this supposition is true. — PossibleAaran
In 1958, Schrödinger, inspired by Schopenhauer from youth, published his lectures Mind and Matter. Here he argued that there is a difference between measuring instruments and human observation: a thermometer’s registration cannot be considered an act of observation, as it contains no meaning in itself. Thus, consciousness is needed to make physical reality meaningful.
Kant's introduced the concept of the "thing in itself" to refer to reality as it is independent of our experience of it and unstructured by our cognitive constitution. The concept was harshly criticized in his own time and has been lambasted by generations of critics since. A standard objection to the notion is that Kant has no business positing it given his insistence that we can only know what lies within the limits of possible experience. But a more sympathetic reading is to see the concept of the "thing in itself" as a sort of placeholder in Kant's system; it both marks the limits of what we can know and expresses a sense of mystery that cannot be dissolved, the sense of mystery that underlies our unanswerable questions. Through both of these functions it serves to keep us humble. 1.
Again, this is the core problem with Idealism and phenomenalism as I see it: they want to keep their cake and eat it. They want to call what's happening in the present moment "experience", "perception", "observation", etc., etc., but they want to retain universal doubt. But if you're universally doubting, then you can't call what's happening right now "perception", "experience", "observation" etc in the first place. But then as soon as you accept those terms, you implicitly accept the physical backstory, so there's no place for universal doubt any more. — gurugeorge
So the reason idealism is significant, is to remind us that knowledge is always conditional, dependent, and in some sense subjective. Not in the sense of there being simply no objective truth, but that there is no ultimately objective truth. — Wayfarer
That everything is connected to everything else, so all the examples given here of things that are unperceived, followed by the question 'do they then exist?' are not unperceived. They are perceived, so the question is moot. — andrewk
Well, no. If there is reason to think the speculation wild, there is reason to doubt it.
Thankfully speculation about my coffee not existing was subsequently shown to be false. — Banno
The fact that things are generally where we expect them to be is as reliable a means as you can get. What more reliable kind of means can you imagine might be available? — Janus
but I'm not sure what value you're seeing in pointing out that we could use different words to describe the phenomenon we experience. — Pseudonym
Again, I'd go back to the deeper sorts of arguments I put forth in our previous discussions. If you're accepting that what you're doing when you've got object x in view truly is that thing we normally call "perception" or "observation", whether mediate (camera, videocamara) or immediate (MK-1 eyeball), then plumping for calling what you're doing "perceiving object x" in the immediate case carries with it your implicit acceptance of whole backstory about physical objects in causal concatenation, such that they can't just pop into and out of existence. — gurugeorge
They want to call what's happening in the present moment "experience", "perception", "observation", etc., etc., but they want to retain universal doubt. But if you're universally doubting, then you can't call what's happening right now "perception", "experience", "observation" etc in the first place. But then as soon as you accept those terms, you implicitly accept the physical backstory, so there's no place for universal doubt any more. — gurugeorge
I suppose I'd first ask, what is it about perceiving the paper that makes you believe you know, in the same sense that you're asking about knowing how the unperceived paper exists, that the perceived paper exists?
Clearly if you believe that then there's some kind of method you're already accepting as a path to knowledge of what exists. What constitutes that method? — Moliere
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