The act is the sensation/seeing, the act cannot produce the cat that you see, only its presence in your visual field can. — jkop
I merely corrected you, by pointing out that the act of "sensing", is the cause of the sensation of a cat. The cat is not the cause of sensing nor seeing the cat. Rather, the living being which senses is the cause of this activity of sensing. Let's position the referred to activity, seeing, where it truly is, within the sensing being, not within the thing being sensed. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can things be the both a cause and an effect? Can they cause themselves? Seems incoherent. — dukkha
You're not correcting anyone by "positioning the referred" cat "to activity, seeing" within the sensing being, because then you'd neither refer nor see the cat, only your own activity of sensing (e.g. "data" or ideas or hallucinations of an invisible cat). — jkop
Our biology causates perceptual activity as the sense organs interact with physical force, radiation etc.. This activity is constituitive for seeing things, but it is the presence of a cat in your visual field which causes your biology to see a cat. The cat is what the perceptual activity is about when you see the cat. — jkop
And everyone responding seems to be nodding their heads, going, "Yup. Eye-beams."
What am I missing? — Real Gone Cat
Yet you wrote this:I'm not positioning the seen cat within the sensing being. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems fairly clear to me that you suggest to position the cat within the sensing being since we were talking about a cat that you see. Now if "the referred" does not mean the cat that you see, then what?... Let's position the referred to activity, seeing, where it truly is, within the sensing being, ... — Metaphysician Undercover
With respect to the OP which concerns the relation between sense organs and experience the location of the act of sensing is hardly an issue here. Obviously sensing is located within the one who's got the sense organs, not elsewhere (we're not discussing whether remote sensing is possible, are we?).I am positioning the sensation of the cat within the being, and saying that the cause of the sensation is the act of sensing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Is it possible to see a cat if one has never been in your presence? It should be, if the mere act of sensing causes the sensation. — Real Gone Cat
It seems fairly clear to me that you suggest to position the cat within the sensing being since we were talking about a cat that you see. — jkop
Now if "the referred" does not mean the cat that you see, then what? — jkop
With respect to the OP which concerns the relation between sense organs and experience the location of the act of sensing is hardly an issue here. Obviously sensing is located within the one who's got the sense organs, not elsewhere (we're not discussing whether remote sensing is possible, are we?). — jkop
Do you agree that the act of sensing is the cause of the sensation? If so, then why do you keep insisting that the object, the cat is the cause of the sensation? — Metaphysician Undercover
The visual experience of seeing a cat is obviously caused by the presence of a cat in your visual field. Otherwise you'd be hallucinating. The biology of the being causes an activity by which things can be sensed but in which nothing is sensed, whereas the presence of the cat causes this activity to sense a cat. In this way the presence of the cat causes you to see the cat. — jkop
... the cat does not really act to produce the observer's visual experience of it. — jkop
I agree.The cat does not cause the observer to have a visual experience, but it does cause the visual experience to be that of a cat. — Real Gone Cat
I would amend that slightly ;). Sensing is hardly passive but it is passively identifying what is sensed, for example, the cat.Sensing is passive. — Real Gone Cat
Sensing is hardly passive ... — jkop
Sensing is passive, not active. We do not get to choose what is in our visual field, other than by making gross decisions such as, "Do I walk into the living room where the cat lies?" Our sensations are dependent on what is present at the time - cat or no. — Real Gone Cat
Sensing is hardly passive but it is passively identifying what is sensed, for example, the cat. — jkop
So to claim that sensing-a-cat is caused by the sense organs is not the usual way that the situation is understood. — Real Gone Cat
Sensing is passive, not active. We do not get to choose what is in our visual field, other than by making gross decisions such as, "Do I walk into the living room where the cat lies?" Our sensations are dependent on what is present at the time - cat or no. — Real Gone Cat
From what I can read, Metaphysician Undiscover is saying something akin to "it's the ball hitting the window that caused the window to break" and jkop is saying something akin to "it's the boy kicking the ball that caused the window to break". — Michael
So in what way is sensing anything other than passive? — Real Gone Cat
Here's how to reconcile them: Biological sense organs are nothing but a particular type of sense-perception.
That was easy. — lambda
... sensing is not passive. There is an enormous quantity of activity occurring within the human body which constitutes sensing. Have you ever considered the activity required to touch something, or to taste something. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can sit in quietly in my backyard and sense my surroundings - I feel the hardness of the chair, hear the birds in the trees, watch clouds drift by. What actions am I taking? — Real Gone Cat
Regardless, I still feel justified in asserting that the OP is flawed - sensing simply does not extend beyond the surface of the sensing organs. — Real Gone Cat
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