First time through, i read that as "medicated". — Banno
Notice the air traffic controller sits looking at his screen.
But do you sit, looking at your perceptions? No. You have your perceptions. The alternative is the homunculus fallacy, the little man inside your head looking out.
You've mislead yourself with the analogy. — Banno
What I envision is a faculty within the brain that processes the impulses received from the various sense organs. I envision that because that's exactly what happens. — Hanover
where is the metaphoric computer screen properly positioned for my analogy to be correct? — Hanover
To say otherwise leaves us asking the age old question of what is the airplane in and of itself, wings and jet engines, or blips? — Hanover
But you are asking me where the line is to be drawn between these mooted internal and external worlds. — Banno
both, or either. There's no essence-of-plane, just ways of talking about planes. Air traffic controllers do talk about the blip as the plane, and they are not wrong — Banno
Again, is a "plane" a plane? I'm just not seeing a difference between a symbol and a thing the way you're describing it. — Hanover
I can only describe the phenomenal. — Hanover
You realize that argument only works for realists. Skeptics and idealists will remain unconvinced by it. They will just reply that we can't make justified claims about a mind-independent real world. — Marchesk
I understand the indirect argument to mean there is something mental mediating perception of the real thing, as a result of all that neural activity. Thus why we have illusions, hallucinations and secondary qualities. Also why it's possible to have internal visual and auditory experiences, like with dreams and imagination. — Marchesk
How many worlds do you live in? — Ciceronianus
Words are real, perceptions are real. Both are removed from the realities they refer to. We can look up from books, we cannot look up from our perceptions.There's nothing real in that mental world to begin with, apparently. — Ciceronianus
The dot on the screen is the plane, much as the word "plane" in "the plane is airborne" is the plane - it's a way of using the dot, and a way of using the word. — Banno
As if you could only talk about the dot, and not the plane — Banno
"The plane" is two words."The plane", the dot, and the thing you sit in are all the same plane, right? — Hanover
How does location play into identity? Not at all? — Hanover
If the dot disappears, I think I'd say "the dot disappeared" as opposed to the plane disappeared because typically planes don't do that. — Hanover
Air traffic controllers do talk about the blip as the plane, and they are not wrong. — Banno
Indeed. But the relevant point here is that they have made a claim about the plane. — Banno
And they can make that claim because there is a correlation between the dot they can see and the plane they can't. But correlation does not imply identity. — hypericin
Do you deny a meaningful distinction between direct and indirect evidence?
— Hanover
No. — Banno
One world, with many different aspects which can be colloquially referred to as "worlds". You are being lawyerly, I guess. — hypericin
we cannot look up from our perceptions. — hypericin
. My point here is simply to say that should I perceive what I think to be a flower or airplane and there's some reason to dispute it, it makes perfect sense to check the health and accuracy of the perception equipment, whether that be running a diagnostic on the radar equipment or giving me an eye exam. — Hanover
If you can't see what a flower really is in the first place, why bother checking — Ciceronianus
But why? If you can't see what a flower really is in the first place, why bother checking to see if you have an eye problem? — Ciceronianus
For me, there's no "external world." There's a world of which we're a part. There isn't one world for us and another world for everything else — Ciceronianus
Sure, but internal visual and auditory experiences, hallucinations, dreams and imaginings are not shareable except by report. — Janus
Yet I think you probably understand the difference between subjective and objective data. You're quibbling over wording — frank
So you say why not just say that the phenomenal is all there is. I say because it's not. But I do agree, pragmatically, none of this matters, where "this" is 90% of what we talk about here. Of course, "this" is a referent; the antecedent is what actually is. — Hanover
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