The content of an experience is the intelligibility actualized in it. — Dfpolis
What in the world is that supposed to refer to? It seems extremely gobbledygooky to me, probably because it's resting on theoretical views that I don't at all buy. — Terrapin Station
To be grasped — Dfpolis
Grasped in what sense? — Terrapin Station
Personally, I don't buy any sort of phenomena/noumena distinction, no appearance/reality distinction. Appearances are what things are really like from some reference point, and there's always some reference point. — Terrapin Station
what the being sees is always an experience of the being, so even though the being may encounter the phenomenon of "just a tree", — leo
Nothing new here.Appearances are what things are really like from some reference point, and there's always some reference point. — Terrapin Station
Nothing new here. — Harry Hindu
Some are talking about how objects are independent of reference points (a view from everywhere). — Harry Hindu
What is the nature of the tree independent of reference points? — Harry Hindu
Again, this is different than the experience qua the experience, which can be of just a tree. The above is a theoretical account of what's going on.
Hence asking a question about experiences qua experiences versus theoretical accounts of what's going on with those experiences. — Terrapin Station
Sounds like realism to me. For a realist there are objects and perception of objects. The qualia of experience are not objects themselves. Many people here seem to be confusing the two. If there isn't a difference between the two, then solipsism. If there is, then (indirect) realism. — Harry Hindu
A reference point is a location is space-time. If there are a combination of reference points, where are they located relative to each other? I can see you looking at the tree, and you are located relative to the tree and myself. Why am I suppose to assume you exist independent of my reference point, but the tree doesn't?There's no such thing, though. Hence the nothing new of "there's always some reference point." The reference point can be a combo of others, but it's still a reference point. — Terrapin Station
You wrote it in the post above - AFTER my post, so how could I have quoted it in my post before you wrote it?I just wrote that there is no such thing, you just quoted it, and you just said "Nothing new here." So why would you even be asking? — Terrapin Station
that both in your theoretical account and his theoretical account everything we experience are experiences of a conscious being, — leo
If there are a combination of reference points, where are they located relative to each other? — Harry Hindu
Why am I suppose to assume you exist independent of my reference point, but the tree doesn't? — Harry Hindu
You wrote it in the post above - AFTER my post, so how could I have quoted it in my post before yours? — Harry Hindu
If there is nothing but objects of perception, then solipsism is the case. If there is more, then realism is the case. It's really that simple.You can argue that the objects of perception are identical to qualia but also argue that external world things exist and are causally responsible for the experience. It's not solipsism because it argues that things other than oneself exist and it's not indirect realism because it argues that qualia aren't representations of these external world things – they might be caused by them but that's where the relationship ends. — Michael
And this thinking that idealism entails that qualia are identical to objects of perception is a false one. Think of the relationship between printed words and the story they tell. There is a logical distinction even if in terms of ontology there's just ink on paper. — Michael
Mars and the Eiffel Tower don't have eyes and a brain. They don't have subjective experiences. How would they have reference points?For example, Mars and the Eiffel Tower would have very different answers as to where all the possible reference points for each are located relative to each other, because of the different spatial arrangements, etc. — Terrapin Station
Intelligibility is grasping. — Terrapin Station
Grasping is being aware. So Knowledge is awareness of present awareness basically. — Terrapin Station
I'd like to have a conversation with you, but if you're just going to keep falling back on word salad/gobbledygook it's pointless. — Terrapin Station
Are you using "knowledge" strictly in the "acquaintance" sense? — Terrapin Station
Mars and the Eiffel Tower don't have eyes and a brain. — Harry Hindu
They don't have subjective experiences. How would they have reference points? — Harry Hindu
Are you saying that when I look at objects, I'm merely looking at other reference points? — Harry Hindu
If a tree is a reference point, then why do I perceive it as an object and not a reference point? — Harry Hindu
The tree is only part of my reference point. — Harry Hindu
Experience is the data we have to work with. One can either work with experience, or one can simply cease thinking. — Dfpolis
No. Intelligibility is what we grasp in knowing. — Dfpolis
Objects can be understood. — Dfpolis
Then you have to pay attention to what I actually say. — Dfpolis
This is a false dichotomy. Ceasing to think is not a choice for a sentient being. Think about it even if you lack the experience (you cannot do otherwise)! — Arne
I never said that is what idealism entails. I have said that there is no coherent middle ground between solipsism and realism (ie idealism). My experience is about an external world, or it isn't. — Harry Hindu
I hope you're not thinking that "Knowledge is awareness of present what-we-grasp-in-knowing" is any less gobbledygooky — Terrapin Station
Objects can be "understood" in what sense? — Terrapin Station
You have to say things in a manner that's intelligible. (Ironically enough.) — Terrapin Station
Your underlying presumption is that our mode of being is capable of grasping ultimate reality and therefore our mode of being grasps ultimate reality. — Arne
Second, what we experience is known a posteriori, not presumed. — Dfpolis
It is not. Before we encounter a duck, it is a duck and capable of evoking the concept <duck>. That capability is its intelligibility as a duck. When we sense the duck, that intelligibility becomes present in us. When we attend to its sensory representation (become aware of it), we actualize that intelligibility and know the duck as a duck. — Dfpolis
We can become aware of specific properties. "Known" in the sense of "acquainted with" might be a better word. — Dfpolis
I think Terrapin Station is saying that there is a real way something IS from a particular spatial temporal reference point, and how that thing is from that particular point is knowable — Noah Te Stroete
You have to invoke theory and make theoretical commitments in addition to your experiences, your perceptions, to arrive at idealism or representationalism. — Terrapin Station
That's all correct. To finish the above, it's knowable, for one, from perception, which isn't theoretical. But in cases where perception isn't possible, sure, then we have to do something theoretical. — Terrapin Station
But you understand that transcendental idealism a la Kant is more than just idealism a la Berkeley or leo? And how do you personally explain how theoretical knowledge is created? — Noah Te Stroete
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