What? You have faith but you lack that faith? — Terrapin Station
You asked your question, which you insisted be answered, in the hypothetical, as my position has never been that I know my perception is representative of the actual tree or that it emanates from the tree. As I've said, I cannot speak of the noumena. — Hanover
Since you've said both that you believe things like trees are unknowable and that there's a tree that's transmitting something to you — Terrapin Station
You asked your question, which you insisted be answered, in the hypothetical, as my position has never been that I know my perception is representative of the actual tree or that it emanates from the tree. As I've said, I cannot speak of the noumena. — Hanover
Perceiving the tree is seeing the tree as it is, from a particular point of reference, via the mechanisms of perception--receiving sensory data via light or sound or touch, etc. where nerve signals are sent to your brain, etc. — Terrapin Station
Is it (is perceiving the tree) experiencing a mental picture of the tree? — bongo fury
But there are not two, there is the 'perceiving of the object.' — Wayfarer
No. There's no reason to believe that it's perceiving a mental picture of the tree — Terrapin Station
Perception of the tree is an activity of the (embodied) brain which receives the sensory stimuli, and synthesises them into judgement 'tree'. — Wayfarer
You're confusing different ideas, seemingly based on a weird "literal" reading of "seeing things as they are."
No one is saying that we see "everything about everything," from every perspective. The very idea of that is incoherent. First off, any observation (in the scientific sense of that term, where it's simply referring to interactions of things) is going to be from a particular perspective or "reference point" and not from other perspectives (reference points). There are no perspective-free or reference-point-free perspectives/reference points.
The perceptions and thoughts of others are like perceptions and thoughts from the reference point of being the particular brain in question. If you're not that brain, you're not going to observe it from that reference point. — Terrapin Station
Where is the "you" that perceives? — Harry Hindu
So "you" are just a perception in your brain? When you use the word, "I" you are referring to a perception in your brain? When "you" aren't being perceived in the brain but something else is, then what is doing the perceiving and where is that thing that is doing the perceiving?Consciousness is a general term for mentality, including awareness. Perception is one set of mental "modes." So is the notion of a self or "you." The location of all of this is your brain. — Terrapin Station
I've pointed this out many times over the years, but if you wind up positing that we can't observe what things like trees are really like, if we can't posit that we can simply observe external things like trees, we certainly can't posit that we can observe things like brains, eyes, nerves, other people (or even the surfaces of your own body), experimental apparatuses to test how perception works, etc. So one winds up undermining the very basis of one's argument. (At least if one is trying to formulate this argument on any sort of scientific grounds.) — Terrapin Station
No. There's no reason to believe that it's perceiving a mental picture of the tree
— Terrapin Station
Having / hosting / receiving / making / storing / processing / being a mental picture of the tree?
Any of those? — bongo fury
and presumably you think that if you perceived this rock from every possible reference point then you would see everything about this rock. — leo
Now replace rock with brain. If you perceive a brain from various perspectives, if you measure its temperature, density, electrical conductivity, electrical activity, nothing tells you there that this thing perceives or thinks anything at all, even if you somehow observed it from all reference points. — leo
Now you could say that a brain is how perceptions and thoughts of others appear to us from our perspective, but then our perspective shows us a tiny part of what's there, and looking at a thing from all possible reference points is still showing only a tiny part of what it is. — leo
other brains have perspectives we don't have or can't have. — leo
And then it seems quite premature to classify a particular reported experience as some hallucination or delusion, rather than as an observation from a reference point we don't have. — leo
In other words, we don't see things as they are from a particular location at a particular time, we see things from a particular location at a particular time from a particular brain. — leo
So "you" are just a perception in your brain? — Harry Hindu
In other words, we don't see things as they are from a particular location at a particular time, we see things from a particular location at a particular time from a particular brain. And that brain dimension is missing in physics and in the minds of those who think they see things as they are from a particular location and time. — leo
All of those, then? — bongo fury
But, like a photograph, it (the perception/mental picture) is a more or less direct trace of physical events, and the opposition are claiming otherwise? They are claiming it's less realistic, like a painting? — bongo fury
If so, then I have to be quite annoyingly arrogant and say "you're both wrong!" (like Homer Simpson, tragic I know.)
But yes. I say: "none of those". Mental pictures are a myth. One as old as real pictures, and probably responsible for all the mutual incomprehension in this kind of discussion. (I did warn you.) — bongo fury
The way I see it, there are two additional dimensions: one relates to value, and the other to meaning. We experience the world not just from a particular perspective in spacetime, but also from a particular evaluative perspective. This perspective comes from the unique sum of our past interactions across spacetime. So too, we experience the world from a particular perspective that positions each of us uniquely in terms of how all our evaluations of experience interact to construct meaning. — Possibility
So one winds up undermining the very basis of one's argument. — Terrapin Station
Well, it will certainly undermine the very basis of realist arguments. — Wayfarer
I've pointed this out many times over the years, but if you wind up positing that we can't observe what things like trees are really like, if we can't posit that we can simply observe external things like trees, we certainly can't posit that we can observe things like brains, eyes, nerves, other people (or even the surfaces of your own body), experimental apparatuses to test how perception works, etc. So one winds up undermining the very basis of one's argument. (At least if one is trying to formulate this argument on any sort of scientific grounds.) — Terrapin Station
In other words, we form a picture of 'mind' here and 'object' there, and wonder what the relationship is between the two. But there are not two, there is the 'perceiving of the object.' — Wayfarer
This is a strawman having sex with a red herring. Of course we observe all those things; that has never been the point at issue. The point is that the things we observe and the things we say about those things are always inextricably relative to our experience and tell us and say nothing definitively decidable about any supposed 'reality' beyond that. I say "definitively decidable" because obviously we can, individually, decide what we want to think about it, but that is, and can be, no more and no less than a preference-driven individual decision. — Janus
Yeah, but there is a brain here and an object over there. Our perception of the object happens inside our skulls, while the object remains outside. Unless it's ingested, then some of it might get into the brain. — Marchesk
I'm surprised that you're commenting authoritatively despite not actually understanding the comment. — Terrapin Station
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