I'm not sure what you're getting at. — Hanover
The properties experienced of the object are subjectively imposed. — Hanover
Apart from representational models another simple way of framing perception is saying that we see objects as they are revealed to us — Janus
there is for us the merely logical idea of what the object could be in itself. (...). Or what import could it have — Janus
It’s import, in accordance with the theory from which it arises, is to limit our empirical knowledge to only that which can be a phenomenon for us. Otherwise, nothing prevents us from claiming knowledge of everything there is, even without the possible experience of it. — Mww
When it comes to empirical knowledge, I would say the limits cannot be predetermined. — Janus
Maybe, but I for one won’t be stepping off the curb in front of a sufficiently massive fast-mover to test a mere possibility. — Mww
... the limit of knowledge ... the limit of knowledgeable things ... a limit on knowledge ... a limit on experience.
... some say experience is knowledge ...
... that which we can know about ... a limit on knowledge itself ... to know of them ...
... new knowledge ... old knowledge ...
And we don’t even know what we don’t know.....
AAARRRGGGG!!!! — Mww
....knowledge...the fundamental way human beings relate to the world.... — Srap Tasmaner
How would you know if you had failed? — Srap Tasmaner
...knowledge....one of the fundamental ways human beings relate to the world — Srap Tasmaner
.....knowledge.....not quite fundamental..... — Srap Tasmaner
The properties experienced of the object are subjectively imposed.
— Hanover
I pointed out that experienced properties of the object are not imposed by us (that is, are not subjectively imposed) — Janus
holographic universe. (...) Apparently it's a serious thing, tho. — frank
Why would it be far fetched? — frank
How do we know what it is that makes knowledge possible. — Mww
But there are two other ways to ask that question: (i) what makes human knowledge possible? and, in a somewhat different vein, (ii) what makes human beings knowers? — Srap Tasmaner
tired analogy of describing the progress of a game in terms of its rules — Srap Tasmaner
there are things about playing soccer they do not know. But there are also things they do not know how to do in the other sense: they cannot do them; they lack certain skills — Srap Tasmaner
And there are things about playing soccer you cannot understand if you lack those skills. — Srap Tasmaner
The development of a skill new to you can change how you understand the game — Srap Tasmaner
If having some skill is a prerequisite for having some cognition, then by ignoring skill you would miss an entire class of cognition, and mischaracterize what’s left. — Srap Tasmaner
If you hold that everything and everyone is part of this world and belongs in it, then how do you explain what are considered aberrations and evil (such as mental illness)? And how do you justify morality, a sense of right and wrong?
If you accept aberrations and evil as somehow normal, as part of this world, then on the grounds of what can they be called "aberrations", "evil" to begin with? — baker
Is this an epistemological or a metaphysical/ideological/ethical consideration?
(Or do you believe that there cannot be one without the other?) — baker
What are the chances you'd be able to do it if you weren't experiencing the same words on the screen? Even if you copy and paste the words you'd still need to interpret the scribbles, "copy and paste" the same way I do. — Harry Hindu
I pointed out that experienced properties of the object are not imposed by us (that is, are not subjectively imposed), then you cited the genesis of non sensorially produced phenomenal states by drugs, brain stimulation, tumors and brain dysfunction, and I pointed out that those are not imposed by us either.
So I was just purporting to refute your claim is all. — Janus
I agree with Dewey on many things, and one of them is regarding what he called "the philosophical fallacy"--the tendency of philosophers to neglect context by seeking to impose general rules upon the world. — Ciceronianus
This is only an argument against classical dogmatism as opposed to a scientific approach arising from experience. If I lost my car keys after dark Dewey would suggest that I should search in context under the streetlights because it is more efficacious. Unfortunately, the odds of success depend on the spacing of the streetlights. Science does not follow either Hercule Poirot's advice to retrace my steps from the pub nor the pragmatist's to look only where I can see. Science builds portable lights to scan at ground level which lengthen and put in motion the shadows of all lost objects along the path. — magritte
My position is that you have an experience, and it might be caused by a variety of things, but the sensation itself ultimately was caused by your brain, or some such internal faculty that experiences. — Hanover
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