The bit where someone explains what indirect realism is still needs work. Seems unclear. — Banno
the kind of thing that we hear in the case of a veridical perception is the same kind of thing that we hear in the case of an hallucinatory perception (e.g. the schizophrenic who hears voices). — Michael
And, I suppose: the kind of thing that we read about in true factual literature is the same kind of thing that we read about in fiction? — bongo fury
Yes. — Michael
So the true factual literature "my dog has fleas" isn't about an actual dog?
Or is it that actual things are the same kind of things as made-up things? — bongo fury
Reading a history textbox doesn't give us direct access to history. — Michael
But the book itself: is it directly about the historical events, or only indirectly? — bongo fury
Obviously the point for me is the usual one, of whether or not seeing an apple is a case of seeing a picture of the apple — bongo fury
Does the schizophrenic who sees people who aren’t there see a picture of people? — Michael
the kind of thing that we hear in the case of a veridical perception is the same kind of thing that we hear in the case of an hallucinatory perception (e.g. the schizophrenic who hears voices). — Michael
What kind of thing is it, if not an actual voice, and now apparently not a mental image either? — bongo fury
I didn’t say it’s not a mental image. — Michael
it’s bad grammar to then describe this as “hearing mental imagery.” — Michael
When a schizophrenic hears voices those voices [that you just said this person hears] are just “mental imagery” — Michael
do you accept that schizophrenics see and hear things that aren’t there? — Michael
Oh, so it's a picture, after all? — bongo fury
Literally they obviously don't. They 'see and hear things'. — bongo fury
That's just playing word games. — Michael
They don't see a picture. They see an apple. — Michael
It's like saying that Frodo carried the One Ring to Mordor, that the One Ring is a fiction, and so that Frodo carried a fiction to Mordor. — Michael
The perception you describe is reading the conclusion on a screen at CERN or conceptualizing the meaning of the particles existence outside of the scientific logic behind the detection of it. — Christoffer
Yes, there needs to be someone reading the data, and interpreting the data. Machines don't do science. — Olivier5
They do not bypass human perception either, they just enhance it. — Olivier5
And the logic behind the apparatus itself and its design and correct operation is theory-based and theory-ladden. — Olivier5
The questions that are being tested, the theories that are built to make sense to the data, are all human ideas. — Olivier5
This is not to say that there is no "outside reality" (outside of what, exactly?). Reality is whatever there is, and to my knowledge, that includes ideas, which are real, and stuff that are not ideas. — Olivier5
But then what's indirect about it? — bongo fury
If you can prove the existence of an object like the Higgs particle then you can logically prove the existence of a larger object that we humans refer to as "an apple" through the same methods of testing and using instruments that bypass our perception. We can provide all the data about the apple that confirms it to be that kind of an object, based on how it correlates with what our perception tells us. — Christoffer
It is this visual and auditory imagery that informs our intellectual considerations, not whatever distal causes are responsible for such imagery. — Michael
You seem to think that the hidden states' steps (light scattering, retinal stimulation, occipital modelling...) mean that the connection is indirect, but the steps that the visual image takes to our response (hippocampus re-firing, working memory channel, sensorimotor inference, proprioceptive cascade...) are direct. Why? Both processes seem to have steps. There are a number of steps between object and model. There are a number of steps between model and response. Why are the latter steps direct and the former indirect? — Isaac
Putting the pieces together, our ordinary conception of perceptual experience involves:
Direct Realist Presentation: perceptual experiences are direct perceptual presentations of ordinary objects.
Clearly, there are differences between these categories, but from a phenomenological point of view, these experiences seem the same in at least this sense: for any veridical perception of an ordinary object, we can imagine a corresponding illusion or hallucination which cannot be told apart or distinguished, by introspection, from the veridical perception.
…
Thus, a veridical, illusory, and hallucinatory experience, all alike in being experiences (as) of a churchyard covered in white snow, are not merely superficially similar, they are fundamentally the same: these experiences have the same nature, fundamentally the same kind of experiential event is occurring in each case. Any differences between them are external to their nature as experiences (e.g., to do with how they are caused).
…
The two central arguments have a similar structure which we can capture as follows:
A. In an illusory/hallucinatory experience, a subject is not directly presented with an ordinary object.
B. The same account of experience must apply to veridical experiences as applies to illusory/hallucinatory experiences.
Therefore,
C. Subjects are never directly presented with ordinary objects.
(C) contradicts Direct Realist Presentation, and thus our ordinary conception of perceptual experience.
It is this visual and auditory imagery that informs our intellectual considerations, not whatever distal causes are responsible for such imagery. — Michael
Let's say we establish an AI that has the purpose of interpreting the data. Its only job is to read and conclude the data to be correct. Now, it hasn't any kind of perception like humans do, and the output will be a binary "yes" or "no". "Is there a Higgs particle?", it answers "Yes". — Christoffer
I'm disputing your claim that indirectness prevents aboutness. — Isaac
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