So first, hallucinations and illusions are real hallucinations and illusions. (Where we're not using "real" in the traditional manner to refer to something objective or that exists extramentally.) But 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
So how can we ever decisively conclude what is hallucination and what isn't? — leo
If things we're determined by minds, by what we're asserting, then we couldn't discover that we're wrong. — Terrapin Station
It's not determined by minds, but by what the world is like. We couldn't just decide to assert that P, where P would then be the case. — Terrapin Station
We could change what we are asserting and interpret it as discovering that we were wrong. — leo
So we don't agree on what concepts are or how they work. — Terrapin Station
Also, I haven't the faintest what "find them latent in my sensory representation" or "actualize prior intelligibility" would refer to. To me that just sounds like words randomly strung together. — Terrapin Station
Re "no basis for applying the concept in a consequent instance"--you construct the concept, and you have a memory. — Terrapin Station
Now, you might say that I partially construct the concept, but then how do I come to the other part? — Dfpolis
"The other part"? I have no idea what that's referring to. — Terrapin Station
we could start in a scenario where there either are or are not other people (using language) in the environment, — Terrapin Station
Let's say that you already have a lot of concepts on hand--like beetles and wings and eyes and so on — Terrapin Station
You discover an odd individual insect — Terrapin Station
You look for other single-winged, eye-goop-shooting beetles in the area — Terrapin Station
per your concept, you decide to call any beetle with more or less one wing, that flies, and that shoots colored goop out of its eyes a cmg. — Terrapin Station
If you say so.
My concept <apple> is not a thing to be constructed, — Dfpolis
As I have said before, we can sense without awareness, — Dfpolis
So specific information is present in sensation — Dfpolis
Last paragraph.....well spoken. — Mww
For socially redeeming value, which is more anthropology or empirical psychology than speculative metaphysics proper, one needs examine the second and third critiques. — Mww
We don't just do that arbitrarily. We do it because we observe the world to be different than how we thought it was. — Terrapin Station
Re that other comment, again, part of what the world is like is physical "laws." You seem to be misinterpreting my views as saying that no on can be wrong re their perceptions relative to what they believe those perceptions peg ontologically. That's not what I'm saying at all. What I'm saying is that we can be right re our perceptions relative to what we believe those perceptions peg ontologically. And that fact is the only way that we can say that any perception doesn't get the world right in the first place. — Terrapin Station
For me, phenomenally, sometimes there's just a tree. There's no subject. — Terrapin Station
Aristotelian-Thomistic moderate realist — Dfpolis
Substance dualism included? — jorndoe
There's you isn't there? — bert1
Appearances are what things are really like from some reference point, and there's always some reference point. — Terrapin Station
The examples you're using for this are not examples where I'd say that you're sensing without awareness. It's rather that there are different "levels" or "degrees" of awareness. Awareness isn't simply off or on, full or nothing. There's a continuum. Is it possible to sense without awareness? Maybe, but such as the driving examples wouldn't work for that. — Terrapin Station
I'm not a fan of the word "information" in discussions like this. I'd need to clarify the definition you're using. — Terrapin Station
Let's do one point at a time. — Terrapin Station
What I am taking about is knowing data as opposed to having and/or processing data. — Dfpolis
Information is the reduction of possiblity. — Dfpolis
Fine. Look at the section beginning with "Ah ha!" and see if that does not resolve our differences. — Dfpolis
If you can't observe the world, how would you observe what other people say to know what the consensus is? — Terrapin Station
I would say I observe a world that depends on my mind and on other minds, I'm not saying that what I observe is totally disconnected from other minds.
Can you answer my questions? — leo
Keep in mind that I am NOT necessarily referring to persons, perceptions etc. by "reference point." I'm referring to spatio-temporal locations.
The reference point would be whatever your spatio-temporal location is. That doesn't imply that there's a "you" in the equation in terms of what's phenomenally occurring. — Terrapin Station
Keep in mind that I am NOT necessarily referring to persons, perceptions etc. by "reference point." I'm referring to spatio-temporal locations.
The reference point would be whatever your spatio-temporal location is. That doesn't imply that there's a "you" in the equation in terms of what's phenomenally occurring. — Terrapin Station
This is getting to the questions. I hate going on and on though, so I want to figure out why we're doing that. — Terrapin Station
But you're claiming that, say, the composition of Mount Everest, say, in some way depends upon other minds.
Why would you believe that? — Terrapin Station
What I am taking about is knowing data as opposed to having and/or processing data. — Dfpolis
You'd have to make the difference clear. — Terrapin Station
Information is the reduction of possiblity. — Dfpolis
? That's just introducing more confusion. Now we'd need to get into the ontology of possibility, too. — Terrapin Station
it's a major hurdle for me that you seem to be talking about "intelligibililty" (I'm not even a fan of that word, really, because it seems to be used for a wide number of different things in philosophy) as if it's something that occurs objectively. There's no way I'd agree with that. — Terrapin Station
There's you isn't there? — bert1
On the occasions in question, no. Not phenomenally. — Terrapin Station
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