"Reality" first means what we encounter in experience...
When you make "reality" mean more than, or something other than, what we encounter in experience, you're creating a mental construct. — Dfpolis
Experience is the data we have to work with. One can either work with experience, or one can simply cease thinking. — Dfpolis
For example, it's never for you just that there's a tree, say. It's always that you have something like "I'm a conscious entity, aware of a tree" present? — Terrapin Station
For example, it's never for you just that there's a tree, say. It's always that you have something like "I'm a conscious entity, aware of a tree" present? — Terrapin Station
If one is positing that one has a body and is perceiving things via one's senses, etc., then one is already assuming realism, by the way. — Terrapin Station
If I make:
1) Reality synonymous with actuality,
2) Experience an awareness event, and
3) Awareness a perceptive and/or cognisant condition,
have we made similar assertions? — Galuchat
If one is positing that one has a body and is perceiving things via one's senses, etc., then one is already assuming realism, by the way. — Terrapin Station
This is one reason the question of whether it's always the case of not just "tree" but "I'm conscious of a tree" (see my post above) is important. — Terrapin Station
It depends on how you explicate your terms.
1) What does "actuality" mean to you? Is it accessible, or quarantined?
2) Are you thinking of "events" as disjoint, or simply points in a continuum we happen to be fixed upon? And, how do you conceive awareness?
3) By "Awareness" i mean what makes intelligibility known. So, it rises above sensory perception in that we can perceive and respond in complex ways without being aware in the sense required to know. — Dfpolis
Yes, trees are often just present — Dfpolis
and if “data is given exclusively in experience”, implies there can be no data outside our experience. If there is no data outside our experience we are presented with two absurdities, 1.) we should know everything because all the experience we have is all the data there is, or 2.) data and experience are congruent which would force the impossibility of misunderstandings.I do not see any other way for there to be data. — Dfpolis
es, trees are often just present — Dfpolis
Sure. So going from that to "this is something I'm perceiving" etc. is theoretical, isn't it? That is, it's literally invoking a theory about what's going on. — Terrapin Station
If there is no data outside our experience we are presented with two absurdities, 1.) we should know everything because all the experience we have is all the data there is, or 2.) data and experience are congruent which would force the impossibility of misunderstandings. — Mww
Be that as it may, I accept the gist of what you’re saying in the OP, so my little foray into the sublime can be disregarded without offense. — Mww
I don't think that reflective thinking is the means of experience. I think that reflective thought is how we seek to integrate experience into a comprehensible whole. — Dfpolis
My question is: is this empiricism, rationalism, or neither (such as in Kant’s view)? — Noah Te Stroete
The argument is mine. I'm a moderate, Aristotelian-Thomistic realist, who thinks that we can have different projections of reality, which is to say that we can represent the same reality using different conceptual spaces. — Dfpolis
is there knowledge that can come from something other than sense data, or that doesn’t have as its foundation, sense experience? — Noah Te Stroete
My other question is: in the case of JF Nash, he had insight into his illness. Someone else may not have this insight. Does someone who hallucinates and doesn’t recognize it not have useful knowledge of reality? — Noah Te Stroete
For example, how does a baby know how to suck on a bottle? Isn’t this an example of innate knowledge? — Noah Te Stroete
It is an example of instinctive behavior. If the child were old enough, it could know that had such instincts. I do not think that we should confuse behavioral propensities/desires with knowledge. For example adolescents have a sex drive, but not an innate knowledge of the mechanics of intercourse. It is rather that the things they want to do will get them there. — Dfpolis
I'm a moderate, Aristotelian-Thomistic realist, who thinks that we can have different projections of reality — Dfpolis
It is rather that the things they want to do will get them there. — Dfpolis
Well......there ya go. I’m a transcendental idealist, who must be an empirical realist by inclusion. I support different projections of reality, but adhere to the thesis that because there is some general empirical data, re: experience and therefore knowledge, potentially common to all rational humans, reality in and of itself is most probably one iteration of all those various and sundry individual projections.
Yes, we think of data differently, but herein I think we are both right with respect to what we each are saying.
Yes, we cannot mis-experience. Odd, isn’t it? We can easily misunderstand, misjudge, and even if those have philosophical explanations, we never characterize our experiences, in and of themselves, as missed. That bell cannot be un-rung. — Mww
Calling it “instinct” or “innate knowledge” is splitting hairs in my view. — Noah Te Stroete
Calling it “instinct” or “innate knowledge” is splitting hairs in my view.
— Noah Te Stroete
What are they aware of? Not some intellectual content, but a desire? — Dfpolis
It is rather that the things they want to do will get them there.
— Dfpolis
I suppose I agree with this. — Noah Te Stroete
I support different projections of reality, but adhere to the thesis that because there is some general empirical data, re: experience and therefore knowledge, potentially common to all rational humans, reality in and of itself is most probably one iteration of all those various and sundry individual projections. — Mww
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