So, our perception of things is always an interpretation, we perceive an always already interpreted world, in other words, and all our judgements are judgements of and about an interpreted world. — Janus
Try this: what exactly does it mean to say that an object exists mind-independently, apart from the obvious "It's there when no one is around". We know what it means to say an object we perceive is there; we can see it. touch it and so on. We don't know what it means for an unperceived object to be there: the best we can say is that if we were there we would be able to see it, touch and so on. But that really amounts to saying nothing at all outside of the context of perception. — Janus
If you're questioning an object's existence independent of some perception of it, then I ask you what your mind is like when no one is perceiving it. How is it that your mind can cease to exist and then come back retaining its memories and sense of self? Notice that I haven't used the word, "brain". Your mind is an object in the world that others can perceive. If we couldn't then how did it ever come to pass that someone made the claim that other minds exist? You might say that I don't know that other minds exist, but unfortunately solipsism brings its own baggage that make it untenable.What do mean "what is your brain like or where does your mind go when you are alone in a dreamless sleep"?
Can you explain what you think the relevance of this question (these questions?) is to what you have quoted me as saying above?
I'll hazard an answer in any case: for me my brain is not like anything, because I am not directly aware of its existence; I believe it exists via secondhand accounts that tell me that if my skull were opened there wold be brain to be found there. — Janus
Well then, what do you mean by "observe" and "perceive"? Where is the perception relative to the perciever?I haven't said we can't observe things; we do it all the time. I haven't said we cannot "get at" (if by that you mean 'perceive') objects, either, so I don't know where this is coming from. — Janus
It 'seems' or I did ? It is not so very sad, is it?Sadly it seems that you misinterpreted a lot of what I said. — leo
The words I say do not convey what's in my mind, they convey your idea of what's in my mind based on what the words mean to you. — leo
What's the difference between imagination and reality? You classify some experiences as 'real' and some experiences as 'imaginary', what criteria do you use to make that distinction? — leo
Many people dismiss spiritual experiences as hallucination or imagination, in other words as something that doesn't really exist, because they haven't had them. — leo
If your idea of what's 'real' doesn't match the social consensus on what's 'real', then you are deemed to be delusional. People get locked up and forcefully drugged because they are 'delusional' — leo
Many people believe they have access to the one 'reality' that applies to everyone, to "the way things are" that applies to everyone, and use that as a justification to impose things onto others, to tell others what to believe in and what not to believe in, to ridicule those who believe differently or to label them as mentally ill, to force them to agree with "the way things are" because that's the way things are, no matter what they might say, if they protest and refuse to submit then that's because they're really sick or really stupid, and if they don't agree that they are objectively inferior beings then that's all the more reason to force them into submission, because how can they not see the one reality in front of them? — leo
I think it's easier to listen when we don't pretend to know what others experience and what they don't, what's real and what isn't. — leo
What other way would it be? Figurative pain? Metaphorical pleasure? Abstract taste? Well, maybe that one for some people. Non-literal feelings?
I dream of platonic reds and functional sounds. — Marchesk
It seems a bit odd to me to use the word "interpretation" in a sense that isn't connected to meaning, but I can't imagine that you have a view that perception can't obtain without assigning meaning to what's perceived. — Terrapin Station
Notice that I haven't used the word, "brain". Your mind is an object in the world that others can perceive. — Harry Hindu
I haven't said we can't observe things; we do it all the time. I haven't said we cannot "get at" (if by that you mean 'perceive') objects, either, so I don't know where this is coming from. — Janus
Well then, what do you mean by "observe" and "perceive"? Where is the perception relative to the perciever? — Harry Hindu
— Banno
It seems a bit odd to me to use the word "interpretation" in a sense that isn't connected to meaning... — Terrapin Station
I would just draw attention to one aspect: "our perception of things is always an interpretation".
Notice that it is a perception of things. Denying this is the error made by Wayfarer and others, in claiming that there are only perceptions, not perceptions of things. — Banno
Perception is always already meaningful; it is not a matter of "assigning anything". You remain unable to think outside the dualistic box, it seems. — Janus
Hmm. Better: there isn't an uninterpreted nature to the world. The distinction is senseless. — Banno
What would you say that meaning is if you view perception as always meaningful? — Terrapin Station
The problem is that to say this amounts to saying there was no nature of the world prior to human life. Or it is to say that there is no uninterpreted world, period. Does this mean that there is nothing if there are no humans, or if there is something, that it has no nature? — Janus
As to your list of "problems" I think Wayfarer may respond that he is not saying the world is created by or is "in" your mind or my mind, but that it is fundamentally mind, not matter. — Janus
Meaning is of many kinds. Have you ever perceived anything utterly meaningless? — Janus
We can't interpret the world we see around us in order to understand what happened in the past?
There's a bit of a flick in the words you use. The world is always already interpreted became there is no uninterpreted nature to the world.
I'm not sure that works. — Banno
Yes. It's not possible to perceive meaning on my view. — Terrapin Station
The world is always already interpreted amounts to the same thing as Wittgenstein's "The limits of our language are the limits of our world"
Perhaps then there is some difference in how we understand interpretation. For me it is plain that the past is part of our world, requiring no special ontology.
That is, there was no one around to talk about dinosaurs when there were dinosaurs; but we can talk about them now. Not a problem. — Banno
I think the inextricable aspects of reality that mind contributes are scale, perspective and temporal duration. They are not 'given' but are part of the architecture of experience (as per Kant's 'primary intuitions'). — Wayfarer
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