might shed light on noumena. — Tom Storm
But the point about the Aristotelian-Platonist attitude is that complete knowledge is only possible for intelligible objects, because in knowing them, there is in some sense a unity with them, which is plainly impractical with the objects of sense, — Wayfarer
Steelmanning or otherwise, without granting....understood a priori as given.....the intrinsic duality of human nature, no defense of any version of idealism will be acceptable. Or, another way to put it, the only defense of any version of idealism is predicated on an intrinsic duality of human nature. — Mww
I am not sure what Molyneux's problem says about the external to the perceiver existence of shape. They've been blind and have not learned to see shapes, and then they learn. — Bylaw
Then what do you think consciousness is? Some etherial entity that extends beyond the body and somehow "contains" or "touches" the external world object that is said to be the object of perception?
This doesn't say anything of relevance. The painting is of a woman, not of paint, but the painting is still paint, not a woman. There's no "direct connection" between the paint and the woman. So even if the experience is of an external world object (and you still haven't explained what it even means for an external world object to be the object of perception) it doesn't then follow that there is a "direct connection" between the experience and the external world object.
Note that I'm not saying that we "experience an experience" or "perceive a perception" (anymore than I'd say that the painting is of paint); I'm saying that experience is a mental phenomena, that there is no direct connection between mental phenomena and external world objects, and that the qualities of mental phenomena are not properties of external world objects.
None of this entails the kind of red-herring grammar ("we experience an experience") that you're trying to argue against. After all, when I dream I don't dream about dreams; I dream about eating an apple - and it's all just mental phenomena with no direct connection to external world objects.
See my post here about glasses, microscopes, telescopes, mirrors, and camera feeds.
Your question has 'inherent meaning' doesn't it? — Wayfarer
neural processes, like marks or shapes or whatever, have no inherent meaning, but that we read meaning into them. — Wayfarer
Yet our thoughts do have inherent meaning — Edward Feser
They are obviously different, they are different senses. So, they experience this thing called shape differently. And one sense has never been used. Sensing are learned skills, just because feeling the shapes doesn't translate into what another completely difference sense experience doesn't mean either one is just a quale.That people who were born blind and recognise an object's shape by touch are not, after becoming able to see, immediately able to recognise an object's shape by sight. This shows that the feel of a sphere isn't like the look of a sphere. — Michael
None of which we experience indirectly. — NOS4A2
All I know is we perceive external world objects. — NOS4A2
Do we not experience mental phenomena then? Because to me it still sounds like you’re saying that instead of a painting you are experiencing mental phenomena, which is an experience. If you’re not experiencing an experience, then how is it you are able to view, observe, see, feel, sense mental phenomena? Upon what do mental phenomena appear and to whom do they appear to? — NOS4A2
So, they experience this thing called shape differently. — Bylaw
Can you explain how we can run through a field and no fall down despite the incredibly complicated surface say a cattle field presents? — Bylaw
Or, perhaps even more to the point, is there a method whereby it is possible to determine if the existence of my consciousness and the existence of the world it experiences are always necessarily codependent and interconnected, or if one can exist independently of and unconnected to the other? — charles ferraro
Using your eyes. — bongo fury
they come from your imagination. — Marchesk
I don't see how our thoughts are any different to the "marks or shapes or whatever" in that they lack 'inherent' meaning. We might find meaning in them on reflection, but I don't see any evidence that the meaning is inherent. — Isaac
I don't see how our thoughts are any different to the "marks or shapes or whatever" in that they lack 'inherent' meaning. We might find meaning in them on reflection, but I don't see any evidence that the meaning is inherent. — Isaac
How can there be anything to discuss, then? You’re not saying anything, you’re just making marks that show up on a screen. I might interpret them to mean anything whatever, and you wouldn’t be able to correct that. You’re sawing off the branch on which you sit. — Wayfarer
our thoughts do have inherent meaning
— Edward Feser
↪Wayfarer — Isaac
So I think Ed Feser's point is a perfectly clear one: that neural processes, like marks or shapes or whatever, have no inherent meaning, but that we read meaning into them. — Wayfarer
One of the most important insights of contemporary brain science is that the visual world is a constructed reality. When we look, what we hold in awareness is not an optical array but a mental construct, built from information in the array, which presents us with all that is of value to us in a scene.
— ibid — Wayfarer
What you see is the apple. — Banno
I don't see how our thoughts are any different to the "marks or shapes or whatever" in that they lack 'inherent' meaning. We might find meaning in them on reflection, but I don't see any evidence that the meaning is inherent. — Isaac
When you look at the apple, your brain constructs a model of the apple. But that model is not what you see; it is you seeing.
What you see is the apple. — Banno
Rather, in the main, Sense and Sensibilia, by Searle's master, Austin. But the arguments can be traced back to G.E Moore and Russell. When we talk about apples we are not talking about modelled items in our minds, not about collective neural firings, not about transcendental, ineffable noumena, but about the things we grow, chop up, peel, stew, and eat. That we do so using our hands, our brains, our minds, our teeth, our words, our money - none of this renders the apple not an apple.Do you generally follow Searle on this? — Tom Storm
When you look at the apple, your brain constructs a model of the apple. But that model is not what you see; it is you seeing — Banno
A bat would have a different range of experiences with this fruit, but it would still be of the apple, right? — Tom Storm
Are idealists suggesting that matter has no inherent qualities and that these are provided by conscious creatures in the world, therefore reality is generated by mind? — Tom Storm
To a fruit-fly, an apple is host to its eggs. If I throw an apple at an annoying bird, it's a weapon. To fruit bats and primates it is food, whereas it wouldn't necessarily register to a carnivore. Which is 'the real apple'? — Wayfarer
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