How do we know that 2 is true? — aletheist
why do we think it's the same tree? — Mongrel
The sameness of you and of the tree and the style of their narrative is then, for me, in a different language-game from one in which one would talk of 'visual fields', and in those different language-games different standards of 'sameness' apply. So any confusion may be clarified by Great Uncle Ludwig's recourse to grammar in the widest sense. Or so a Wittgenstein-lover like me might argue :) — mcdoodle
Say you're staring at a tree. You move about 180 degrees around the tree and stare again.
1. The content of your visual field changed,
2. but you're still looking at the same tree.
C1: Therefore, your knowledge of the tree is not derived from the content of your visual field
3. Knowledge of the tree is not apriori — Mongrel
The sameness of you and of the tree and the style of their narrative is then, for me, in a different language-game from one in which one would talk of 'visual fields', and in those different language-games different standards of 'sameness' apply. So any confusion may be clarified by Great Uncle Ludwig's recourse to grammar in the widest sense. Or so a Wittgenstein-lover like me might argue — mcdoodle
Good question. It's not because of the content of your visual field which simply contains grey and brown and greens, bright light and darkness.How did you know that you were looking at a tree in the first place? — Harry Hindu
'Knowledge of a specific tree' is not a priori, but knowledge that it is a tree is based on the knowledge of the class of things called 'tree' of which this or that tree is an instance. — Wayfarer
I didn't mean to sound obscure. I only meant that 'visual field content' sounds scientific, and thus requires a certain level of precision. To be very precise, both you and the tree are changed entities in the course of your short narrative, but by convention, we still call you you, and the tree the tree. It all depends how precise you want to be. — mcdoodle
There must be some actual basis upon which the "daemons" do the "stitching", meaning that such purported "sub-routines" cannot be merely arbitrary, no? — John
Peter Berger's book 'The Social Construction of Reality' — Wayfarer
My current working hypothesis is that what is perceived by humans as real is inextricably connected with their perceptual and cognitive faculties. — Wayfarer
I'm afraid I've never read anything by him other than 'Social Construction' but he was once well-known for 'The Invisible Religion', a view that religiosity permeated much of our social action in under-recognized ways. — mcdoodle
A bee and a human will not perceive a flower in the same way. But we have every reason to think they both perceive the same "object", don't we? — John
But how would you perceived the flower independently of how a human perceives it? — Wayfarer
So to determine that, you would have to see the object independently of how either of them see it. — Wayfarer
But if you tendentiously distort what I say through its lens, and thereby fabricate figures of straw to knock down to your own satisfaction, — John
This is because, as per this example ( and there are countless others) everything we know about bees and flowers is consistent with the idea that their interest in them is stimulated by the presence of the nectar they extract from them. It seems obvious that they can recognize flowers as sources of nectar (not self-consciously of course) just as we do, since they don't spend their time confusedly trying to extract nectar from random objects. — John
You didn't attempt to address my question about whether you think that "perceptual and cognitive faculties" exhaustively create or construct the content (as opposed to merely determining the form) of experience, either. And that is the very question which poses the most difficulty for your position. — John
I (Kant) understand by the transcendental idealism of all appearances the doctrine that they are all together to be regarded as mere representations and not things in themselves, and accordingly that space and time are only sensible forms of our intuition, but not determinations given for themselves or conditions of objects as things in themselves. To this idealism is opposed transcendental realism, which regards space and time as something given in themselves (independent of our sensiblity). The transcendental realist therefore represents outer appearances (if their reality is conceded) as things in themselves, which would exist independently of us and our sensibility and thus would also be outside us according to pure concepts of the understanding. (CPR, A369)
The transcendental idealist, on the contrary, can be an empirical realist, hence, as he is called, a dualist, i.e., he can concede the existence of matter without going beyond mere self-consciousness and assuming something more than the certainty of representations in me, hence the cogito ergo sum.(A370)
In the narrative 'you' are assumed to remain the same you, a first puzzle. The tree changes as you pass it, but in such a slow way that we tend to discount the difference, just as we do with whether your movement and ageing changes you significantly. (I saw a recent theatrical enactment of Paul Auster's New York trilogy in which two identically-dressed actors played him, one emerging a moment after the other left, or the two co-existing on stage for a moment) — mcdoodle
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