 RegularGuy
RegularGuy         
          Mww
Mww         
          Dfpolis
Dfpolis         
         Minor distinction, perhaps. I consider projections of reality our expressions about it. Reality itself is that which is given to us. Reality comes in via perception, projections go out via understanding. — Mww
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         It depends on how you define "theory." If you mean a hypothetical structure, then, no, it is not a theory. If you mean a way of organizing experience, then yes, noting that certain things (trees) are equally capable of evoking the concept <tree> does organize our experience. — Dfpolis
 RegularGuy
RegularGuy         
         The only way to move away from realism with respect to experience is to introduce theoretical explanations for what's really going on. — Terrapin Station
If you mean a way of organizing experience, then yes, noting that certain things (trees) are equally capable of evoking the concept <tree> does organize our experience. — Dfpolis
 Dfpolis
Dfpolis         
         ...Yes, 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
"Theoretical"--basically in the sense of reasoning about something, coming up with an account of "what's realy going on" contra the phenomena in question, etc. — Terrapin Station
The point is that phenomena that are present aren't actually always of one as a conscious being experiencing things. The only way to move away from realism with respect to experience is to introduce theoretical explanations for what's really going on. — Terrapin Station
 Dfpolis
Dfpolis         
         This requires a more in depth discussion to distinguish the differences. — Noah Te Stroete
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         I think it is naming, not theorizing. In what way does "this is something I'm perceiving" go beyond our experience? — Dfpolis
 Mww
Mww         
         I would say that we try to model reality, — Dfpolis
 Dfpolis
Dfpolis         
         "Reality" first means what we encounter in experience... — Dfpolis
I'm waiting for the other shoe to drop.
IOW, is there a second, third, fourth (etc) elaboration of the meaning of reality (what we encounter in experience)? — Galuchat
 Dfpolis
Dfpolis         
         whether sometimes the phenomena that are present aren't simply things like trees, rivers, etc. — Terrapin Station
This is to say that the phenomenon present sometimes is not but simply a tree. — Terrapin Station
In other words, there's no conscious notion, awareness, etc. of perceiving something per se (or of conceiving, etc.) There's just a tree. — Terrapin Station
If it's the case that the phenomenon present can sometimes just be the tree, then the phenomenon present on that occasion will not be "I am perceiving a tree." So, for those occasions, "I am perceiving a tree" is doing something theoretical (as I'm using that term) that isn't present in the phenomenon it's about. — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
          Dfpolis
Dfpolis         
         I would say that we try to model reality, — Dfpolis
Granted, but what is a model but a construct? — Mww
Whether model or construct presupposes that which is its cause, which in its turn presupposes a necessary displaced orientation of it. — Mww
That is, because it is reason modeling, the cause absolutely must be oriented exclusive to reason — Mww
knowledge of the model cannot be distinguished from knowledge of the cause of the model — Mww
But give to his sensibility something for which he has no ready conception, he should be all the more surprised by what little he really knows. — Mww
 Galuchat
Galuchat         
         Natural science seeks to discover general principles for understanding objective reality in abstraction from the knowing subject. — Dfpolis
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
          Dfpolis
Dfpolis         
         What is objective reality, and does it require subjective reality? — Galuchat
 Harry Hindu
Harry Hindu         
          Dfpolis
Dfpolis         
         Does it make sense to you that "(Just a) tree" is different than "I am perceiving a tree"? — Terrapin Station
So the experience (again, I was trying to avoid that word--we could just say the phenomena) of:
<<(just a) tree>>
would be different than the experience (phenomena of):
<<I am perceiving a tree>> — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         My point was that while the form of these is different, their matter is the same. — Dfpolis
 Dfpolis
Dfpolis         
         Once you question realism, you slide down the rabbit hole of solipsism, and there is no such thing as a middle ground (ie. idealism). — Harry Hindu
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