Direct Realism is correct logically and phenomenological speaking. When I see a tree, I see a tree not a mental representation of a tree. — John
In any instance where a person sees a colour in response to an object, an objective colour is shown: it is true that the object in question has the relevant colour. — The Willow Of Darkness
Notice that 1) is impossible if the two are phenomenologically indistinguishable. If for any particular case I cannot tell, then it cannot be that I can tell for the most part (or in other words, there is no way by his own criteria to tell whether or how often I can tell or not). So whether or not jamalrob wants to say this (perhaps he does), he can't. — The Great Whatever
I can't see why you think there is such a problematic tension between these two ways of talking about perception; the one from within (phenomenology) and the other from without (science). Why should we be surprised or perplexed that things look different from different angles? — John
How does the perception of a tree differ from a mental representation of a tree? — Michael
Crucially, any object (and any part of any object) has it existence defined by itself rather than by whether it is perceived. — TheWillofDarkness
But, for me, it would be tendentious and philosophically pointless gobbledygook to say that 'we see mental representations'. — John
We are not talking about phenomenal immediacies like colors but about different categories of experience that are well understood and distinguished by all. Not a good analogy, in other words. — John
How things are defined is irrelevant. What matters is whether or not the object's features when seen are also its features when not seen. Can you show that the apple is red and tasty even when I'm not looking at or tasting it? Does it even make sense to say that the apple is tasty when not being tasted? — Michael
It does make sense to say there is a tasty apple when not being tasted. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Both those objections are incoherent.How does a blind person experimentally show that there are objective colours?
Furthermore, "X has property Y when not seen" does not follow from "X sees Y when stimulated by X", so the above doesn't account for objective colour. I might see a chair in response to being poked in the brain by a neuroscientist but it doesn't then follow that the chair continues to exist when I stop seeing it (or even when I am seeing it). — Michael
You don't think that if you told people that you perceived apples as square, black and white, roughly textured, smelling like rotting fish carcasses, tasting like warthog faeces, as large as houses, that people would think you are insane? Wouldn't they think you are insane because they know that apples are none of these?
Wouldn't such a perception simply be an incorrect perception of an apple? — John
Apples are tasty, even when not being tasted, in the same sense that the world is visible, even when not being seen. — John
Given that, you know, does make sense, it doesn't bode well for your argument.It makes no more sense than saying that there is a painful knife when not being used to stab someone. It's only painful once it's experienced a certain way, just as an apple is only tasty or red when experienced a certain way. — Michael
No, it doesn't. The knife doesn't contain the property of painfulness when not being used to stab someone. It's painfully obvious.
Obviously, as the blind person doesn't see them, they do not perceive any of the objective colours of an object and referring to their experience doesn't show any of those colours. Perceiving something about an object requires experience that shows it. The blind person doesn't have this. — TheWillowOfDarkness
No more or less then the properties of mass, shape, colour, smell tastiness, etc.,etc. All aspects of an object are only encountered during specific interactions between the body and the object. Pain is no different. We only see something when an object it within our field of vision. We only hear something interacts between objects generate a sound our ear picks-up, allowing our body to generate the experience. Pain only occurs when object hit out body in specific ways. Aspects of objects are all alike in this way. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Such a perception would only show that your body reacts differently to most people to the same sensory stimulus. In everyday language we might say that you're seeing or smelling or tasting it wrong. But that's hardly indicative of a metaphysical fact.
Is the smell or taste of animal feed pleasant to you? Probably not. Is it pleasant to the animal? Probably. Is one of us wrong (or insane) and the other right? Is it pleasant or not pleasant when not smelt or eaten by either animal or man? — Michael
I agree, but that's a point of grammar rather than metaphysics. The metaphysical issue is on whether or not the features present in the experience (the shape, the colour, the smell, the taste, the feel, etc.) are present even when the experience ends. The direct realist argues that they are and the indirect realist argues that they're not. The indirect realist argues that shapes and colours and smells and tastes are mental representations of mind-independent causes (in the same way that a footprint is a representation of a foot). — Michael
Yes, but such a series of perceptions of an apple (if it were indeed possible) would not be correct, in the sense that it would not be within a range that could be considered normal for a human body. — John
But really, even to say that is too modest; apples are not square, they are not black and white, do not smell like rotting fish carcasses and so on. I think it is arguable that it would not be possible for any sentient being to perceive apples in these ways.
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