But the notion of finding out how things really are outside any perspective is unintelligible I think. — ChatteringMonkey
I understand the reasons for thinking that, but it does undermine evolution, cosmology, geology as explanations for how the world as it appears to us now came to be that way.
We can still do the science, but it becomes an appearance as well. It appears to us that we evolved, but the reality could be something else entirely. It would be like if God created the universe six thousands years ago to appear as though it was old, evolution occurred and what not. Or the simulation was programmed to make it appear that way. In that case, dinosaurs never existed. Their fossils are an appearance to us.
Scientific explanations become part of the appearance, but they don't say anything about the underlying reality. So we have no confidence that we actually evolved. It only looks like that empirically. — Marchesk
But an underlying reality that we can't sense, that has no effect whatsoever our action or goals, that we have no way of knowing more about and that is not even a coherent notion to begin with... what's the point? — ChatteringMonkey
Just to give an example where it could matter, creationists could use that to dismiss evolution as merely an appearance. The underlying reality was created by God 6K years ago. Why God made it look like evolution occurred? Mysterious ways and testing the faithful. Or Satan did it. I don't know. They will think of something. — Marchesk
Yeah that is at least the conclusion that Nietzsche for example drew from it... that if the true world, or how things really are, is an incoherent notion, what you are left with is perspectives. Everything is a allways viewed from a perspective. — ChatteringMonkey
I asked "what about perspectives?" - meaning, is there a how things are for perspectives? If there is, then how things are isn't an incoherent notion. How things are for your perspective relative to my perspective is a real difference, unless you are actually part of me when I read your posts (solipsism). If all that exists are perspectives, then we need to redefine "perspectives", as we commonly understand today that perspectives are of other things. If you are saying that they aren't, rather that perspectives are the only real feature of the universe - the only thing that there is a "how things are", then it really isn't a perspective that we are talking about are we?What about the perspective itself? From where is it viewed to say that there is a "how things are" for a perspective? It creates an infinite regress of needing perspectives as the structure for the subsequent perspectives.
— Harry Hindu
I don't quite understand how get to the that infinite regress. But yes, you can be correct or wrong from a giving perspective, i'd say... which is to say, it doesn't have to lead to something like epistemological nihilism or relativism, or something like that. — ChatteringMonkey
I don't understand how someone could be wrong or right about anything if all there are are perspectives.It depends obviously, sometimes a difference will be due to having a different view on it, and you can be both 'correct' from a given perspective... but you can also, like I said, definitely be wrong about something.
This is what is often misunderstood about perspectivism. It's not the same as relativism or subjectivism, in the sense that every point of view is subjective and therefor equally valid or as correct as the next. It's just the acknowledgement that things are viewed from a certain perspective and that different perspectives are possible. And eventhough knowledge is allways partial in that sense, it nevertheless is 'objective' or 'about the nature of the thing', for lack of better words. — ChatteringMonkey
I think jamalrob is arguing that how an object looks, tastes, feels only applies to perception. There's no such thing as what an object looks like without someone seeing it. The indirect realist goes wrong by assuming there is, and then proposing the additional mental intermediary. But there's no need for the intermediary if the act of seeing is what something looks like.
If that sort of argument works, then the debate is rendered moot. There's still a realist question of what objects are independent of perception, but they aren't like perception — Marchesk
Sounds like you can't really have one without the other. Every cause or effect is inferred.For indirect realists; the proof of indirectness is inferential representation.
For direct realists; the proof of directness is causal contact. — fdrake
I asked "what about perspectives?" - meaning, is there a how things are for perspectives? If there is, then how things are isn't an incoherent notion. How things are for your perspective relative to my perspective is a real difference, unless you are actually part of me when I read your posts (solipsism). If all that exists are perspectives, then we need to redefine "perspectives", as we commonly understand today that perspectives are of other things. If you are saying that they aren't, rather that perspectives are the only real feature of the universe - the only thing that there is a "how things are", then it really isn't a perspective that we are talking about are we?
Where is your perspective relative to mine? In answering this question would you not be describing "how things are" between our two perspectives?
So, are you and Marchesk and Jamalrob parts of me when I read your(my) posts? Are we now understanding why the "you" needs to be defined in order to proceed forward on this topic? — Harry Hindu
I don't understand how someone could be wrong or right about anything if all there are are perspectives. — Harry Hindu
It's a question about the existence of knowledge and perspectives - their nature, especially as they relate to what they are about.It's a question about knowledge rather then existence. — ChatteringMonkey
So there isn't a how things are when it comes to knowledge and perspectives? Then what on Earth have we been talking about all this time when saying or writing those words? — Harry Hindu
What do we mean with 'how things are'?
:-) — ChatteringMonkey
Because we seem to have come to the answer to that question.Don't know why you ask me that question. I though my point was clear from the first post I made addressing one of yours — ChatteringMonkey
What we mean is "how do things (like perspectives and knowledge) exist"? — Harry Hindu
Well, then I guess we're opening a can of worms because I see the material/physical vs mental/experiential dichotomy as a false one.Could you clarify that question, because I don't get it as it is formulated... How do perspectives and knowledge exist seems like an odd question to ask, because they don't, if we take existence to mean what it generally means, material or physical existence. — ChatteringMonkey
part of every perceptual feature is a proposed collection of environmental interventions which are in accord with those goals. To put super special emphasis on this; the goals and environmental interventions are part of perception, and our perceptual features are laced with (summaries of) them. — fdrake
(Direct realism (feature) ) The properties of a perceptual feature of a perceptual event are identical with those of what the perceptual event is directed towards. — fdrake
Active accounts of perception have exploratory and goal-directed environmental interventions as part of the perception itself. In that regard, hallucinations, or the argument from dreaming, are effectively not forms of perception because two necessary components of perception have been denied of it. Only the relation or absence of relation of descriptive content remains. — fdrake
In a typical instance of perception; not some weird Ramachandran stuff where he's managed to convince the body that the knee is a table by perturbing expectations of the causal structure of the environment — fdrake
the interventions we enact are not causally separated from environmental hidden states, even if the inferential summary of environmental properties are. — fdrake
When there is a successful modelling relationship between a perceptual feature and what it regards; or an intervention and our overall model of the causal structure of our environment; the overall perceptual state we're in, and its perceptual features, are indeed informative of our environmental objects. But informational dependence in that sense is not the same thing as saying the properties of the apple in total are existentially dependent upon our perceptions of it. — fdrake
For indirect realists; the proof of indirectness is inferential representation.
For direct realists; the proof of directness is causal contact. — fdrake
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