Are hallucinations real? — Galuchat
Yes. They are real experiences potentially informing us of the reality of some neurological disorder. — Dfpolis
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
If there is no object independent of perception, then it would simply be wrong to say that we perceive anything. — Harry Hindu
I'm not missing that point because in that post I put on the realist shoes, so to speak. Remove the "out there" if you want, the point still stands, in realism encountering the phenomena of a ghost or of a god or of water means that they refer to real things. — leo
To me a projection is first some aspect of reality existentially penetrating us -- projecting itself into us -- and second, our fixing on some part of that presentation and projecting it into our conceptual space. Each of these steps is represents a potential loss of content and so is a projection in the mathematical sense of a dimensionally diminished mapping. — Dfpolis
So "In what way does 'this is something I'm perceiving' go beyond our experience?" doesn't make sense in the context of the question I asked and your initial answer to it. "Just a tree" is not the same thing as "This is something I'm perceiving."
That suggests that maybe you didn't really understand the question. — Terrapin Station
It's really simple. If there is no object independent of perception, then it would simply be wrong to say that we perceive anything. — Harry Hindu
So, dreaming does not count as perception, but imagination? — Janus
I do not understand this sentence. — Dfpolis
Our reason is intentional (...). Thus, it points beyond itself. — Dfpolis
...models combine abstracted and constructed elements. — Dfpolis
I actually think this might be a better model than Kant’s from Critique of Pure Reason. — Noah Te Stroete
Don’t mind me.....I’m just sittin’ here wonderin’.....what mechanism does reality use to project itself? — Mww
can experience the reality of electrical shock in the dark. — Mww
The eyes receive the light radiated or projected off of objects. — Noah Te Stroete
You presume realism here when you say that. Not saying it's wrong, just pointing that out. — Janus
Why don’t we just say reality appears to us, rather than projecting itself? — Mww
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