I think you are conflating the taste of the apple with the tasting of it.
I don't think many realists would argue that the tasting of an apple is present when it is not being tasted. — John
The direct realist is pointing out they are all part of an object. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Taste and smell, like pain and sight, are merely parts of objects which are only experiences at certain points. The direct realist is pointing out they are all part of an object. Else we give-up unperceived objects, as take away the significance of an object when pervade and there is nothing of the object left, and so fall into the incoherence of idealism.
Direct realism has never argued this. Red is, for direct realism, red. It isn't identical to ~620–740 at all.But is redness identical to electromagnetic radiation at a wavelength of ~620–740 nm? It's not. The former is a representation of the latter. That's why indirect realism fares better than direct realism. — Michael
Direct realism has never argued this. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Red is, for direct realism, red. It isn't identical to ~620–740 at all.
Electromagnetic radiation at a wavelength of ~620–740 may result in many possible experiences of colour. Some people might see red when encountering it. Other people might not (e.g. colourblind people). Other people might not even see a colour at all (blind).
This is indirect realism. — Michael
Why? Why must an organism react to stimulation by electromagnetic radiation at a wavelength of ~620–740 nm by stimulating the visual experience which we name "red"? — Michael
The receptors (cones) that have the right physical characteristics to be affected by light in the wavelength range you cited (so-called 'red light' ) are the ones that enable seeing red. If the organism, let's say mammal, has these cones (most don't) they will see red; if not, then not — John
A sour apple will taste more like another sour apple than it does like a sweet apple; even if they are never tasted
I'm not exactly sure where your problem is; but I think you are somehow confusing yourself by reifying words.
What is the taste of the apple? Is the taste of the apple identical to the chemicals which stimulate the taste receptors? It must if direct realism is to work. But sweetness is very different to molecules. Hence indirect realism. — Michael
Yes, there is. That's the whole point of this conversation: that in any case, the direct realist by his own position can be mistaken about whether something is hallucinatory or not. Honestly, I wish people would read the discussion before commenting. — The Great Whatever
The taste of an apple is just the taste of an apple. Apples have certain flavours, no two apples the same flavour, and no apple will taste exactly the same to two people (at least it seems reasonable to think not, even though the very notion of something tasting the same to two people is kind of incoherent to start with). — John
Sweetness may be a characteristic of molecules, just as heat is the agitation of molecules, but is also from another perspective "very different to" the agitation of molecules.
The receptors (cones) that have the right physical characteristics to be affected by light in the wavelength range you cited (so-called 'red light' ) are the ones that enable seeing red. If the organism, let's say mammal, has these cones (most don't) they will see red; if not, then not — John
And different animals (or even different persons) might have different receptors that are affected by such light in a different way and so see a different colour. They're no more wrong than we are wrong in not seeing the same colours as a mantis shrimp.
Furthermore, it's not enough to say that seeing red is a necessary consequence of being stimulated by such light; you must say that redness is a mind-independent feature of such light if you are to be a direct realist. — Michael
A sour apple will taste more like another sour apple than it does like a sweet apple; even if they are never tasted
That it will taste like X (when tasted) is not that it does taste like X (when not tasted). To maintain direct realism you must say that the apple tastes sour even when not tasted. It's a nonsense position.
I'm not exactly sure where your problem is; but I think you are somehow confusing yourself by reifying words.
The direct realist is the one reifying, treating taste and colour and smell as concrete features that exist independently of the experience.
Redness is a mind independent feature, but seeing red is not. That seems to make perfect sense to me. What's the problem? — John
You are, ironically, accusing me of doing in relation to heat, the very thing, that is running two senses together, which you are doing in relation to colours. smells and tastes. — John
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