So, how does one know that insects perceive UV light? From what reference point is that given? How do we know the structure of atoms? Has anyone ever seen a single atom? — Noah Te Stroete
But is it anti-realist? — Noah Te Stroete
...one speaks of realism or anti-realism with respect to a given area or subject matter: universals, say, or the past, or other minds, or sets, or micro-entities in physics. And in one use of these terms, the realist is just a person who argues that there really are such things as universals, or other minds, or propositions. In this way of using the term, a realist with respect to inferred entities in science thinks there really are such things as the elementary particles-atoms, electrons, quarks and the like--endorsed by contemporary physics; he adds that they have pretty much the properties contemporary science says they have. And of course an anti-realist with respect to inferred entities denies these things. Call this sort of anti-realist an 'existential anti-realist'.
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But there is another brand of anti-realism, one that is substantially a modern, post-Kantian phenomenon. The Kantian anti-realist doesn't deny the existence of an alleged range of objects; he holds instead that objects of the sort in question are not ontologically independent of persons and their ways of thinking and behaving. Kant didn't deny, of course, that there are such things as horses, houses, planets and stars; nor did he deny that these things are material objects. Instead his characteristic claim is that their existence and fundamental structure have been conferred upon them by the conceptual activity of persons. According to Kant, the whole phenomenal world receives its fundamental structure from the constituting activities of mind ... let's call it 'creative anti-realism'.
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So there are at least two kinds of anti-realism: creative and existential. Each, furthermore, can be restricted to a certain domain, or taken globally (although global existential anti-realism--the view that nothing whatever exists-has never been popular). With respect to a given domain, one can be either a creative anti-realist or an existential anti-realist.
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One might be an existential anti-realist with respect to unobservable entities such as quarks, but an existential realist with respect to the ordinary middlesized object of everyday life. Or one might be an existential realist with respect to the former and a creative anti-realist with respect to the latter.
The Kantian anti-realist doesn't deny the existence of an alleged range of objects; he holds instead that objects of the sort in question are not ontologically independent of persons and their ways of thinking and behaving. Kant didn't deny, of course, that there are such things as horses, houses, planets and stars; nor did he deny that these things are material objects. Instead his characteristic claim is that their existence and fundamental structure have been conferred upon them by the conceptual activity of persons. According to Kant, the whole phenomenal world receives its fundamental structure from the constituting activities of mind ... let's call it 'creative anti-realism'.
Okay, so first, you're applying a concept that you've constructed. Do you agree with that? It's not as if you're perceiving concepts or anything like that. A concept is something you do, personally, in response to things. — Terrapin Station
Secondly, you can perceive a duck and not think anything like the name "duck," or think of the concept of a duck, or any sort of mental content per se period, right? — Terrapin Station
I don't see what that would have to do with the word "understand(ing)" or "intelligibility." Those seem like misleading words to use there. (At least relative to their conventional senses.) — Terrapin Station
Does anyone here really understand one another? — Noah Te Stroete
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 by thinking about a theoretical model of that reference point in relation to the object. That doesn’t require a perceiver but a thought grounded in theory. Theory comes about from experience from perceiving and about thinking about the objects of perception, which have an actual way they are from a spatial temporal reference point. Is that right? — Noah Te Stroete
What exactly then is your position re Kant about what is inherent to the mind as laid out in Critique of Pure Reason? Is space and time at least partially constructed in the mind? Or are space and time inherent to the physical world ONLY? — Noah Te Stroete
Sure, but I'm not at all endorsing representationalism, idealism, etc. Those require theoretical moves just like any other stance does. That was the point. — Terrapin Station
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
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
I also have difficulty seeing any socially redeeming value in transcendental idealism. — Dfpolis
The latter being the unconscious or autonomic condition, the former being the conscious or attentive condition? — Mww
But you said some data is available to awareness but some data processing is not. Seems like this is two separate and distinct dynamics, only one of which would seem to have any continuity with the treatise on Realism and experience. What bearing does unavailable data processing have on the topic? — Mww
I call an object’s modification of my neural state the appearance of an object; it is not yet represented by a synthesis of intuition and concept. So yes, we agree perceptual duality is a non-starter. — Mww
Radiance of action....ok....just another theoretical tenet. — Mww
Not clear about partial identity. What would be full identity? — Mww
If the apple’s modification of a neural state is identically a representation of the apple, is that the same as saying the apple is experienced? — Mww
Does this experience correlate one-to-one with knowledge? — Mww
Where did “apple” come from? Doesn’t look like this theory has any place for conceptual naming. — Mww
If one holds with the idea that any object of perception is nothing to us until we add our own elements to it, by means of synthesis, rather than take away from its totality those <8 thoughts you spoke about, there is no need for confusing the abstraction for the object. While there is still a chance for confusion, it arises from judgement alone, as an aspect of reason. — Mww
A transcendental idealist says that some things are empirical experience and other things are mental constructs. Sense data are by their nature from outside reality. Space and time and frames of reference are mental constructs or inside projected outside. Did I get that right, @Mww? — Noah Te Stroete
Pretty much covers it, yep. — Mww
Are hallucinations real? — Galuchat
Yes. They are real experiences potentially informing us of the reality of some neurological disorder. — Dfpolis
, we arrive at:The same insights can be articulated in various ways. — Dfpolis
....becomes reason may subsequently convert sensory experience to knowledge.Awareness may subsequently convert sensory experience to knowledge — Dfpolis
.....becomes knowledge *of* and knowledge *that*.First is knowledge as acquaintance, (...) (and) There is correspondence — Dfpolis
...becomes the ground for the viability of the ten Aristotelian and twelve Kantian categories, as universally extendable conceptions.we come to understand that the concept has universal extension — Dfpolis
....becomes due to the fact these differences are at least logically irrelevant, insofar as no identifying property of an apple may ever be logically applied to the identity of a horse, we are permitted to disregard the totality of properties or attributes of objects of perception, and merely assign concepts to them a priori as understanding thinks belongs to them necessarily. As such, accidents are circumvented.Because of the irrelevance of such differences to the central concept — Dfpolis
I agree that we have individual associations with objects, but I don't see them as part of the core concept. — Dfpolis
I'm not so sure. Is time and space an illusion - a product of how our minds parse the world?Of course. I was talking about whether reference points are inherent in the world absent minds or not. — Noah Te Stroete
Well, yes those are changing properties of oranges and orange trees, only one of which has to do with location - "falling". The others are properties of the orange that do not change when you change your location, like "ripeness". Ripeness is a property of the orange that changes. Ripeness does not change with location. Thought is a property of me that changes. Ripeness and thoughts are properties (that are not spatial properties) of different things in the world that interact and produce taste and smell of ripe or rotten oranges. The taste and smell of oranges would be about that interaction between ripe oranges and gustatory and olfactory sensory organs.How would you think that the properties of an orange (or anything else) don't change? You wouldn't be able to have orange trees flowering, some of the flowers turning into fruit, the fruit developing, eventually ripening, falling, decomposing, etc. — Terrapin Station
Well, I'm an indirect realist, so I would agree that we don't directly apprehend, but we do apprehend. How would we be able to even posit and confirm the existence of atoms if not for some observation? It seems to me that we don't just look, we interpret. It's just a matter of interpreting correctly what it is you are seeing (a mass of atoms). But we don't see atoms. We see light, which is why a mass of atoms looks bent when submerged within another mass of atoms. If something is lost in perception it seems to me that we would never know and not be able to posit the existence of those things or properties.Perception is about the things causing the perception. One doesn’t directly apprehend the thing in itself. One perceives things. A lot is lost in perception (for example, do you perceive atoms when looking at a chair?), and the mind constructs a “story” about the object that is perceived but not directly apprehended. — Noah Te Stroete
Then how can we get at causes by observing only effects? Were the tree rings in a tree stump caused by how the tree grows throughout the year independent of some perception of the tree growing? How is it that we can determine the age of the tree by the number of tree rings if it wasn't for how the tree grows independent of my perception of its growth?“Reference” implies a referring to something. Can something refer to something else without conceptualization or perception? That is what I can’t figure out. I’m leaning towards no. — Noah Te Stroete
I didn't use the word, "representation". I used the term, "about". "About" as a preposition is defined by the Cambridge dictionary as "on the subject of; connected with".Do you not understand the difference between causation and subject matter/representation? When I talk to you my speech is caused by my body (lungs, vocal chords, mouth, etc.) but those words aren’t (always) about my body. When I flip a switch on a wall it turns on a light but that light isn’t a representation of me flipping the switch.
There can be an external world that stimulates whatever it is that I am in such a way that it elicits in me a certain kind of experience without it then following that such an experience is representative of or about that external world cause.
The tree we experience isn’t the atoms and photons that cause the experience. It’s a coherent, non-solipsistic, anti-realist account of trees. — Michael
No, I do not construct concepts in experiencing and abstracting. I find them latent in my sensory representation. So, I actualize prior intelligibility, converting a potential concept into an actual concept. I do this by focusing on a particular aspect of what is presented. If I constructed concepts as you suggest, there would be no basis for applying the concept to its next instance. — Dfpolis
Now, you might say that I partially construct the concept, but then how do I come to the other part? — Dfpolis
And, on what basis do I apply the construct to a new instance in which (on your view) it is not latent? — Dfpolis
would you say that mentioned mental constructs are part of the same larger world (outside reality) as the experienced?
If so, then Galuchat's inquiry seems to indicate a need to differentiate among hallucination and perception, yes? — jorndoe
I’m trying to figure out how you justify your belief that reality is directly apprehended. — Noah Te Stroete
Okay. So now my question would be, if anything anyone experiences is reality from a particular reference point, how do you ever get to a distinction between reality and hallucination? — leo
The mentioned mental constructs, re: space, time, points of reference, are not of the same larger world as the experienced; they are the necessary conditions for it. — Mww
All optical illusions are hallucinations from empirical misrepresentation, but some hallucinations are purely logical faults given by understanding itself. In the former, judgement usually reconciles the defect and its cognition is modified, [...] — Mww
we can know that there are no real pink elephants in someone's apartment when they're hallucinating a pink elephant in their apartment, because other people can see that there are no pink elephants, we can tell this via instruments, as well, and we know a lot about how matter behaves and can behave, what's required for there to be an elephant in an apartment, and we also know a lot about how brains work, including how they work on LSD (if that should be the case in this instance), etc — Terrapin Station
No elephants were harmed during this event. — Disclaimer
Are hallucinations real? — Galuchat
Yes. They are real experiences potentially informing us of the reality of some neurological disorder. — Dfpolis
I suppose, like synesthesia and phantom limbs perhaps.
That seems to converge on some sort of ordinary realism, surely not mental monism (idealism). — jorndoe
due to the fact these differences are at least logically irrelevant, insofar as no identifying property of an apple may ever be logically applied to the identity of a horse, we are permitted to disregard the totality of properties or attributes of objects of perception, and merely assign concepts to them a priori as understanding thinks belongs to them necessarily. — Mww
I think you mean we each understand what an object is by the way we associate extant experience to it, but those experiences are not seen as part of the core concept of the object. If that is correct, or at least close, then I would agree, because the “core concept” of an object would give to us the thing as it is in itself a posteriori, by presupposing apprehension of the unconditioned (assuming a “core concept” is some sort of ultimate cognitive reduction), which my philosophy will never allow. — Mww
An ontological hierarchy of sorts? — jorndoe
I'd just say that swimmers in water look different than swimmers out of water. — jorndoe
what do we call these different types of reality? — Galuchat
I'd just say that swimmers in water look different than swimmers out of water.
(At least we do have some understanding of what's going on with refraction, reflection and such.) — jorndoe
monstrous caveat — Mww
what would a swimmer out of water look like? — Mww
Aristotelian-Thomistic moderate realist — Dfpolis
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