Are there possibly other universes or dimensions in which the physical world utilises different physical phenomenons that are beyond our depths of understanding? — Susu
I'd suggest that the first thing to understand is that senses work upon differences - gradations, distinctions, and invariants under movement - in an environment. — StreetlightX
How do we recognize things if we only "just" seek differences?I agree with SX. We don’t see the physical world as such. We just seek its informative differences. — apokrisis
Attention is the amplifier or suppressor of sensations depending upon the present goal in the mind.Sensation is attention. — apokrisis
We don’t see the physical world as such. — apokrisis
I can see we are not aware of the totality of what is going on around us by our evolved senses but what we sense is still grounded in the physical world. — Nils Loc
Fundamentally any body of knowledge that represents a good account of how the world behaves is validated by the senses, otherwise something else is going on, like supernatural monkey business. — Nils Loc
...therefore I am - what?I individuate, therefore I am. — apokrisis
Categories are different groups of similar items. — Harry Hindu
Word salad.Categories are differences that make a difference by grouping the differences that don’t make a difference. — apokrisis
Yet a cat is similar to a dog. They are both mammals. As a matter of fact, everything is part of just one category - reality, or nature.A cat is different from a dog. — apokrisis
Exactly. Our minds favor patterns over the randomness. Minds are more at ease with patterns than with randomness.That perceives life semiotically in terms of signal found in noise. — apokrisis
Yet a cat is similar to a dog. They are both mammals. — Harry Hindu
What I do disagree with is your proposal that that is all that we make. — Harry Hindu
You don't even understand what you said. I called it word salad for a reason.Which I never said. So get it right. — apokrisis
You are saying that there are only differences - those that make a difference and those that don't. Never mind that your using two different meanings of "different" in your sentence. You are simply being artful, not coherent, with your use of words.I said there are differences that make a difference distinguished from differences that don’t. — apokrisis
A good example is hue perception or colour discrimination. Yellow and red aren’t objectively physical qualitities that we had to evolve to see. Instead they are differences we manufacture to make the basically similar look violently different ... at a glance. — apokrisis
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