Yes, of course. Nothing is identical from two different spatiotemporal locations. This is NOT just about perception. It's about ontology in general. It would be the case if no people/no perceivers existed. — Terrapin Station
Are you advocating a form of idealism in ontology? — Wallows
Spinoza comment. — Terrapin Station
My point is that an observer is redundant is God is one and the same with god being nature. — Wallows
Again, what I'm saying is NOT just about perception. It would be the same if no people/no perceivers/observers existed.
That's why I wrote "NOT" in big capital letters. So you wouldn't think that I'm saying something about perception, etc. — Terrapin Station
Then please elaborate about ontological commitments in light of private content or whatnot? — Wallows
I was explaining how direct realism isn't incompatible with non-shareable mental content. — Terrapin Station
Let me know why would you think otherwise? — Wallows
Gah! That's what I've been typing. lol — Terrapin Station
The fact that it's what I've been typing makes it an epistemic issue? — Terrapin Station
So you agree or not that it is an epistemic issue? — Wallows
How about just addressing the question? — Terrapin Station
I'm lost here. Just where did this start and where are we going? — Wallows
NOT — Terrapin Station
(I need to figure out why you're thinking they'd be incompatible, especially as you didn't understand my earlier explanation of this.) — Terrapin Station
I think Chomsky avers (somewhere on youtube) that Hume and Heraclitus were privy to the same insight. Of course he draws a different lesson from it than Quine. But he doesn't say the doctrine itself is mistaken, or even that it is behaviouristic. And it isn't. It points out that you can't objectively ground reference in behaviour. — bongo fury
Substance>Ontological>Epistemic>Perceptual>Mind? — Wallows
I don't know how you'd see the "beetle in the box" part as an epistemic issue. It has epistemic upshots, but it's an ontological issue. — Terrapin Station
Re this question, "Substance>Ontological>Epistemic>Perceptual>Mind?" I'm not sure I understand what you're asking. For one, what are the right arrows symbolizing there? — Terrapin Station
It's epistemic if you're an indirect realist. — Wallows
Starting from substance, in that order, ending with the mind. — Wallows
The logical problem here, the philosophical interesting side issue, is that beliefs overdetermine our actions. There are other beliefs and desires that could explain my going to the tap. — Banno's profile quizzed by Wallows
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