Right, but it's important because it means that our thoughts about the world can't be entirely different from the world, on a realist account. — Marchesk
If we're brains-in-a-vat then a theory "which meets all observational data and satisfies every theoretical constraint" might fail to say anything about the world outside the vat (which, according to realism, would be the real world). — Michael
It could be that whatever is in the vat is nothing like the brain as we understand it and that whatever this thing is in is nothing like a vat as we understand it. — Michael
If mind is dependent on mind-independent reality, then you can't have an arrangement entirely outside our understanding giving rise to our understanding. — Marchesk
In which case I would just deny the thought experiment as being incoherent, since it can't even say what being envatted means.
That doesn't follow. That A depends on B is not that an understanding of A gives us an understanding of B. — Michael
What is problematic for the noumena is that we can't know what it is, by definition.
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It follows that we can't make an argument that A depends on B if we don't understand anything about B. — Marchesk
In which case you can't make an argument that appearances depend on something else — Michael
You need to add "entirely unlike appearance" to make that work. — Marchesk
You need to add "entirely unlike appearance" to make that work. If reality is entirely unlike anything we perceive or conceive or talk about, then we have no basis to say there is such a reality. But I'm not stating that. I'm stating that what we perceive, think and say is dependent on that reality such that we can't be totally in the dark. — Marchesk
Then you've begged the question and presupposed that the world of appearance is something like the mind-independent world. — Michael
I'm providing an argument against one of the criticisms of realism, which is that an ideal theory could be completely untrue. It's a move available for realists to make. — Marchesk
To put it another way, the realist does not need to maintain that our experiences and thoughts are entirely different from reality. All that matters is that the world is not dependent on us. — Marchesk
If the real world is what appears and if the anti-realist accepts that things appear then the anti-realist accepts that there's a real world. — Michael
Does the phenomenalist say there cannot be any such machinery, or merely claim that we could not know anything about it? — John
Is the internal realist an anti-realist, then?
Is so, it would seem somewhat contradictory.
If the internal realist claims there can be such a machinery, but admits that it might not be experienceable, then would that not be tantamount to admitting that there could be a reality that is not internal?
The part that causally explains phenomena, yes. But in contrast to the metaphysical realist, the internal realist rejects the claim that any of the more meaningful things we talk about – "the chair exists", "the cat is on the mat", "e = mc2" etc. – say anything about these non-internal parts of the world. — Michael
But in contrast to the metaphysical realist, the internal realist rejects the claim that any of the more meaningful things we talk about – "the chair exists", "the cat is on the mat", "e = mc2" etc. – say anything about these non-internal parts of the world. — Michael
I would agree with you about the first two examples, which ostensibly speak only to an experience which can be thought to be 'internal' to, in the sense of being circumscribed by, language; but "e=mc2" speaks to nothing internal to our experience, but rather says that the fundamental constitution of matter is such that it holds an unfathomable potential for an enormous release of energy. This latter actually is a metaphysical claim since we can never see (experience) this potential or the energy, but merely what are inferred to be the effects. — John
Basically all I asserted was that "e=mc2" cannot be made sense of as an empirical statement in the same way as "the chair exists" or "the cat is on the mat" can. — John
I don't see how what I said is necessarily connected with scientific realism.
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