I feel like the thing you said about posts being bad was weirdly placed. It seemed to say something like: I don't need to respond to you, because this is a lame place! — csalisbury
I was just puzzled by why you thought my comments were irrelevant, since they have to do with the topic discussed in the OP exactly. Maybe you wanted to talk about something else, not the OP, and were disappointed the conversation didn't steer the way you wanted? — Snakes Alive
It's true that that's how we're accustomed to think of it by default. I don't think there's any possible way to answer transcendent questions about whether that way of seeing it is the right way.
The point is that the Cartesian turn allows one to see it the other way – a way that one initially does not even understand that one can see it. In that sense, it's not like learning a new true proposition, but being able to see where once one was blind. You get a new ability. The Cartesian is also right that in some sense this is the way it was 'all along.' You can of course choose to ignore this new ability and have faith that it is just an aberration, and the old way of seeing things is the 'right way.' But it's just that – faith.
It's not true that the sun is small and here. It's large and out there. etc — csalisbury
So I agree, but that was my whole point. We're accustomed to think our experiences are "of" things, but there's no reason to think that's so. I take Descartes just to have noticed this.
The problem with insisting that there is no such distinction and thus to reduce (in a sense) perceiving to believing/disbelieving tends to show up when trying to account for perceptual error -i.e. not the mere withholding of full assent to a proposition, but a genuine belief, based on vision say, that something in the environment is a certain way visually when it in fact is not that way. In those cases, the pressure to move from "something appears to be F" to "something actually is F" remains. — jkg20
The problem then isn't that we can't know reality prior appearance, but we can't even discuss a reality without appearances. — Hanover
imagine a world where electric lighting has not yet been invented. In this world, all colors appear exactly as they are. Green looks green in natural light, and so on. With the invention of electric lighting however, colors can now appear to look other than what they are. — StreetlightX
the problem of trying to make the move from appearance to reality is not one, insofar as they are something of a package deal. — StreetlightX
global doubt makes no sense, even to a lucid dreamer; to know/feel that all this is a dream is already to have a sense of reality. — unenlightened
2) The adult is still free to wonder if she might have been mistaken in her former confidence about wakefulness — frank
3) Sellars probably does undermine the argument from illusion, which means we're talking about sense data, not dreams. — frank
True, but global skepticism does not positively assert that this is a dream, and so is not hypothesizing anything.Of course. If I think, "all this is a dream" as anyone can, it is to hypothesise a wakefulness that is absent — unenlightened
I await with interest your spelling out the difference between sense data and dreams, without recourse to reality. — unenlightened
Right, and there was an analogous kind of self-awareness when the empiricists noticed that you could come to 'see' things as just rearranged as different sizes in the visual field, instead of representing objective distances. We just naturally see these things as distances, but we only do this by means of the visual field being stimulated in this way, and when one turns to epistemology one 'sees' this again. Usually one sees 'through' it. — Snakes Alive
We're accustomed to think our experiences are "of" things, but there's no reason to think that's so. — Snakes Alive
That is, if something I took for reality turns out, in the final analysis, to be 'just an appearence', doesn't this passage from one to the other already presuppose reality? Isn't the 'result' the same? i.e. appearence-talk is tributary to is-talk? Or put yet otherwise: the problem of appearance is that it is not-reality. Reality here wears the pants - there is no reification of appearance into a quasi-standalone-entity. — StreetlightX
I disagree with your characterization of the Cogito as 'thought constructed as real from doubt.' — frank
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