Adding the camera puts me in mind of homunculi. — Banno
When you encounter something in a dream you are experiencing something which is there. — TheWillowOfDarkness
To further your analogy in context of my replies to Banno, if your camera then adds a filter along with some metadata to the picture, then that extra stuff are properties not from the object itself. That information is generated by the camera. — Marchesk
whether the camera is directly taking a picture — Terrapin Station
as opposed to... indirectly taking the picture? — Banno
The issue then is whether we can know this or not. — Terrapin Station
We don't just have the photo. — Banno — Banno
The camera is coloring it, sure. The issue then is whether we can know this or not. Direct realists say we can. Representationalists say we can't know it. — Terrapin Station
You seem to think that you are alone in the world, and can't decide if the camera is telling you what is real and what isn't. — Banno
I'm saying the exact opposite of that. — Terrapin Station
I don't know why it's so difficult to communicate that. — Terrapin Station
Representationalism can't do this, because per its claims, we can never directly access the world. The best we can ever do is conjecture. — Terrapin Station
So for example, we have this:
A...............................@......................................B
The properties of are different at @, at A and at B (and at every point in between). If A and B are persons with perception, etc., they can directly perceive what @ is like at their spatio-temporal location, but that's not identical to what @ is like at any other spatio-temporal location. — Terrapin Station
A and B can agree as to the facts, by considering what looks like from the other's point of view. — Banno
It does leave itself open to skepticism.
What if we said that we directly perceive some aspects of an object, like it's shape and location, but other aspects. such as its reflectivity to visible light are indirect?
We can see this with eating shrimp. We can know things about the shrimp from putting it in our mouth, like size and solidity and that it's an animal, but we don't know about its chemical makeup from the taste, without developing a science of chemistry first. — Marchesk
A and B can agree as to the facts, by considering what looks like from the other's point of view. — Banno
is not 'seen' at all, it does not 'look like' anything from any perspective — Isaac
The looking doesn't come first, the model of comes first, the looking is just to check. — Isaac
Unless you think that life had the capacity to create models prior to being able to obtain any sensory data. — Terrapin Station
Yes. Friston has demonstrated active variance reduction in sensory inputs of amoeba, — Isaac
First, there's no Friston or amoeba in the real world in your view, is there? — Terrapin Station
It depends on the context of our discussion. As I have said countless times, I hold that beliefs are dispositions to act as if, I can therefore hold different beliefs in different contexts, there's no reason why the model I use in one context (where I assume there are such things as Friston and amoebae) should in any way cohere with the model I might use when discussing the way things 'really are'. You're acting like the nerdy child who says in the middle of an game of Star Wars "you're not really Han Solo though are you?". — Isaac
We're talking here (using models which we all share) — Isaac
Think of the man who just is infatuated with love. He says that it goes beyond what is sayable.
Paradox? — Wallows
Exactly.I feel as though the issue is resolved if we disregard the behaviorism. One must resort to talking about intentionality and volition, which come before words? — Wallows
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