The fact so many are enamored by the thought of being brains in vats is disturbing, as it seems to amount to a rejection of the world in which we live. — Ciceronianus
The trick in dealing with the noumenal is to understand that it makes no difference to anything you might choose to do. — Banno
Is the flower the way I see it or the way the bee sees it? If some creature sees it as a blinking light, is it a blinking light?
It's a tough question. I might be off here, but I would think direct realism would permit that different creatures, with differing biologies, see the same thing and that the experience is always veridical. — NOS4A2
As soon as we insert "the way something sees" (the flower as a blinking light, for example) in between seer and seen we presuppose indirect realism. So I think the question is somewhat loaded. — NOS4A2
Yet Descartes didn't reject the world in which we live, so that must not have been the implication of the evil demon thought experiment. — Hanover
So you think the thread about the external world is not about the external world. — Banno
Is the flower the way I see it or the way the bee sees it? — Hanover
There's no reason to think it becomes something different depending on whether a human or bee is involved in the interaction. There's no reason to think it is something different than what we interact with and what a bee interacts with. There's not one flower for us, another for the bee. — Ciceronianus
There's not one flower for us, another for the bee. — Ciceronianus
my understanding of direct realism there are no differing representations of the flower to present and there is no observer beyond the lens to present them to. I think at the very least indirect realists need to prove that there is some sort of barrier between observer and observed. — NOS4A2
If the perception of the bee of the flower is blue and the perception of the flower to me is red, what color is the flower? — Hanover
Red. — Tom Storm
We began to insert (as it were) something between us and the "external world" some centuries ago, for reasons I find difficult to understand — Ciceronianus
The naive realist believes perception reveals the world as it is. — hypericin
If a wall stands between an observer and a flower, we no longer perceive the flower, we perceive the wall — NOS4A2
I don’t know if any of this factors into it, but for me the locus of perception is the entire organism — NOS4A2
I don’t know if any of this factors into it, but for me the locus of perception is the entire organism
— NOS4A2
That's just scientifically incorrect. My nose doesn't see things, nor does my pancreas. — Hanover
In a way, he’s right. We construct body schemes that participate in interpretating all of our perceptions.
The following article give a sense of how
“sensory and motor information, body representations, and perceptions (of the body and the world) are interdependent”. — Joshs
You should know it. — hypericin
Any perception is necessarily a co-creation of both the perceived and the perceiver. It cannot be any other way. — hypericin
For something to be consciously perceived, it must be mapped onto a perceptual plane. This perceptual plane is contingent, and has everything to do with the perceiver, nothing to do with the perceived. — hypericin
When you hear a pure 440hz tone, it sounds a certain way to you. But that sound in your head has nothing to do with the vibration in the air. — hypericin
You can't get out into the world itself, ever, the doors to the library are locked. — hypericin
Does your position require that I actually believe bees and humans perceive in the same way? If it does, I think your position just fails to scientific evidence. — Hanover
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