Maybe S. is trying to get this thread closed for the same reason? :D — Michael Ossipoff
Whatever you know about your physical surroundings is from your experience. Your experience is primary for your physical world and its "objective" things. — Michael Ossipoff
Whatever you know about your physical surroundings is from your experience. Your experience is primary for your physical world and its "objective" things. — Michael Ossipoff
What you know about the physical world, you know from your experience. — Michael Ossipoff
.That they're objective just means that they don't depend on being experienced in order to exist.
.Nothing you've said there explicitly contradicts that.
.Saying that experience is primary suffers from ambiguity. Primary in what sense?
.What does that mean in this instance? It could mean a number of things.
.That I know a whole bunch of things through experience doesn't mean that I don't know that there are rocks in other distant galaxies that I've never experienced.
The point is that to say this, I have to be doing something theoretical — Terrapin Station
Reports of the work of theoretical physicists are part of your direct observational experience too.
Are you yourself doing something theoretical? Of course. You're theorizing about a metaphysics that you can't define. — Michael Ossipoff
Reports of the work of theoretical physicists are part of your direct observational experience too.
Are you yourself doing something theoretical? Of course. You're theorizing about a metaphysics that you can't define. — Michael Ossipoff
I'm not sure I understand either of those comments in context. — Terrapin Station
1. I don't know how else to word this: You've directly observationally experienced (in a magazine, a tv show, a book of descriptive physics or astrsonomy, etc.) the work of theoretical physicists. — Michael Ossipoff
Right. But in context, what does that have to do with anything? — Terrapin Station
Phenomenally, many things are not of my experience. They're just doors and computer monitors and sidewalks and so on. — Terrapin Station
If you didn't mean what I thought you meant, then feel free to clarify what else you did mean. — Michael Ossipoff
This is a double confusion. First, you're confusing the imagined properties of an imagined object with the actual properties of an actual external object. Second, you're confusing appearance in the imagination with appearance to the senses.Properties of the tabletop
1. Is not coloured, but rather reflects light of particular wavelengths
2. Size is fixed
3. Shape is fixed
4. Is discrete not continuous, because made of molecules.
— Herg
Those would be appearances too, within the range of experiences that we use to call imagination. You visualize that object somehow, but you're still involved in the act of visualization. — leo
As I said, the reason to believe in the stuff is that it explains why our sensory experience is the way it is. There are other possible explanations (e.g. the Berkelian explanation that God puts these sensory appearances into our minds), but these invariably involve hypothesising the existence of something for which there's no evidence.Physicist Michael Faraday pointed out that what's observed and known about our physical world consists of logical and mathematical structural-relation, and that there' s no reason to believe that it's other than that. ...no reasons to believe in the "stuff" that the relation is about. — Michael Ossipoff
We get what “objective” means, but you didn’t define objective “existence”. (…except in terms of itself). — Michael Ossipoff
As the basis for all that you know about the physical world. — Michael Ossipoff
...there are likely... to be rocks in other distant galaxies. — Michael Ossipoff
I’ve already said that your direct observational experience (of scientific reports, in this case) is the basis for your indirect experience of more than you’ve directly observationally experienced. — Michael Ossipoff
1. I don't know how else to word this: You've directly observationally experienced (in a magazine, a tv show, a book of descriptive physics or astrsonomy, etc.) reports of the work of theoretical physicists. — Michael Ossipoff
Either you or S. was saying or implying that what we hear about the world outside of your direct observational experience means that it objectively exists (whatever that would mean). — Michael Ossipoff
I'll have to resume this discussion tomorrow, because there are household tasks to be done. — Michael Ossipoff
.Some appearances are not of experiences per se. In other words, not everything appears as "this is an experience I'm having." Some appearances are simply of "things" like doors and sidewalks and so on.
Just speaking of conscious experience, if you notice something, you experience it. — Michael Ossipoff
.It's easiest to understand if we add theoretical stuff to it. But it's important to remember that the theoretical stuff is just that.
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