So, is it possible on your view that all of your experiences could be hallucinations? If not, why not? — The Great Whatever
By "found himself" I meant to suggest that this is what he experienced. One person experiences himself waking up in a post apocalyptic world and another doesn't. Who is having the real experiences and who is having the false ones? — Michael
I'd have thought that quantum mechanics has already shown that our sensory apparatuses are not causally related to anything like the objects we take ourselves to be perceiving (instead they're causally related to things very unlike the objects we take ourselves to be perceiving). But it doesn't then follow that the apple we see is fake. — Michael
So, is it possible on your view that all of your experiences could be hallucinations? If not, why not? — The Great Whatever
I think I want to bypass the second one entirely, because the comment was more in passing, and in any case I'm not sure that 'embodied' is anything but a hoo-ha word. The stakes of the argument or what points are to be made are just unclear to me, and I can't see the debate being productive. — The Great Whatever
But the apple you take yourself to perceive is not just the electro-magnetic radiation and subatomic particles that you claim "explains" the perception. — Aaron R
I'm still not sure what it could even mean to say that a perception is veridical while at the same denying that anything like the ostensible object of perception actually exists. That seems incorrect almost by definition.
I'm saying that a description of the apple as we perceive it is not a description of whatever mind-independent things explain the occurrence of such a perception. — Michael
I am saying that there's no good reason to believe this insofar as there's no good reason for accepting the reductionism on which it is based. — Aaron R
To think that when we see red or taste sweetness that this redness and sweetness are inherent properties of these mind-independent causes is evidently false. — Michael
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/color/One of the most prominent views of color is Color Objectivism, i.e., the view that color is an objective, i.e., mind-independent, intrinsic property, one possessed by many material objects (of different kinds) and light sources. — SEP
1) I can tell the difference, for the most part. between veridical and non-veridical experience.
2) I cannot always tell the difference between veridical and non-veridical experiences. — John
Can one experimentally show that there are objective colours? — Michael
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