But if you've ever seen an afterimage, the perceptual evidence seems pretty stacked up in favour of a relational logical form. — jkg20
If you want to argue for direct realism, indirect realism, idealism, or something else then that's fine, but to do so with reference to the allegedly 'competing' statements "John saw a red, round afterimage" and "John sensed redly and roundly" seems misplaced.
He may (or may not) have been right about that, but I'm not sure what its relevance is to the idealist's position that "John saw an afterimage" and "John saw a football" are statements made true in exactly the same kind of way: i.e. by the existence of objects of vision. — jkg20
But "what is an afterimage?" is a question that makes perfect sense, which can be investigated and to which different answers can and continue to be given. — jkg20
I agree, to some extent at least. It's the adverbialist that puts the emphasis on logical form and I introduced the problem in an "adverbialist-friendly" manner. But as far as I'm concerned it's really the phenomenology that points to afterimages being objects of vision, and the adverbialist is ignoring the phenomenology.My point was that the grammar of the statement "John saw a red, round afterimage" doesn't imply that we are "treating afterimages as actual things with such features" (and that adverbialism doesn't avoid this by using the statement "John sensed redly and roundly"), just as the grammar of the statement "it is raining" doesn't imply that there's some thing which performs the activity of raining. The statements are just how we speak, nothing more.
I've never come across arguments that deflationism/disquotationalism supports realism rather than idealism (or anti-realism of any kind). What/who would be a good example of that kind of position? — jkg20
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