Dreaming is not a shared experience; whereas what we call reality is an inter-subjectively shared and agreed upon experience. — John
As to the logical possibility that reality taken as a whole might be radically different than we imagine it to be; sure, it's logically possible. the problem is that when we are asked to imagine a possible scenario in which that might be true we cannot but imagine the hidden real reality in exactly the same familiar terms as our familiar reality. So, the idea doesn't have much currency really because we cannot turn it into any coherent story that does not consist in elements taken from the reality we are familiar with. In other words such an idea is really inconsequential; it is as nothing to us, because it must remain a difference that could make no possible difference on account of the fact that we cannot even begin to frame it as a real difference.
We know we use the same words and we know that others identify the same features of objects as we do. That's why se say things are independently, because things are reliably experienced in the same ways by most everyone. — John
That the TV screen is either "just a collection of individual lights" or " a scene full of people and things" or anything else we can imagine or come to think it is or might be; none of this is a case of reality being radically different than we imagine it to be. The fact is that we simply cannot genuinely think of reality as being radically different than we imagine it to be, and that is the point that makes the merely logical possibility that it might be radically different than we imagine it to be really quite an empty incoherent idea.
The fact that due to physical constitution or whatever people may see things slightly differently doesn't change the fact that things are generally reliably seen in much the same way by most everybody. — John
If reality were truly radically different, it would be unrecognizable, unintelligible. We cannot even imagine such a scenario, so it is effectively meaningless.
But we do have good evidence, insofar as we have little reason to doubt, since there simply is not any competing explanation for why people do routinely see the same things. — John
How ofetn have you pointed at a car for example and said 'look at that car' and the other person said' that's not a car, it's a dog'? Or even 'that's not a Maserati, that's a Volkswagen beetle'. ;Let's go into that coffee shop':'that's not a coffee shop that's a swimming pool'. "I'm going to take you to the mountains tomorrow"; "this isn't the mountains: it's the opera".
If reality were truly radically different, it would be unrecognizable, unintelligible. We cannot even imagine such a scenario, so it is effectively meaningless. The 'real' reality is always 'brains in vats' or 'mad scientists" or "demons" in other words constructed out of familiar elements taken from the reality we do experience. Our imaginations have access to no other material.
This is a false analogy. I'm saying that we might use the same words to describe different things. The above is an example of people using different words. — Michael
If you are going to say things such as that what I experience as having a cup of coffee, someone else might experience as what I would call 'swimming the length of an Olympic pool' then I am just going to say, "don't be silly", and leave the conversation there. — John
The fact that we don't use such different words shows that we experience the same things. — John
Obviously not by continuing to assume representational perception; basically your question and problem arises from that asumption, i.e. that you only see your own impressions, sense-data or the like, and never the objects directly.how do I know whether everything I'm seeing isn't what I think it is — The Great Whatever
Whence the assumption that it would be an impression? See, you continuously assume representational perception without noticing it .nothing about having a certain visual impression implies the metaphysical conclusion that something external is causing this impression). — The Great Whatever
Obviously not by continuing to assume representational perception; basically your question and problem arises from that asumption, i.e. that you only see your own impressions, sense-data or the like, and never the objects directly. — jkop
Whence the assumption that it would be an impression? See, you continuously assume representational perception without noticing it . — jkop
how do we know that all of our perceptions are not just of these misleading ocular phenomena and not of what we think they are? — The Great Whatever
That argument begins by pointing out that we are sometimes mistaken (which obviously implies that some of our assertions are true.) — Mongrel
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