Anything internal is me, though. What else mediates it? — NOS4A2
Do you believe that from this position there is a 'reality as it is in itself' or do you consider such a term incoherent - 'reality' being a constructivist process, dependent on a point of view for its meaning? — Tom Storm
Depends what you mean by 'mediate'. Again, if you don't want to make a distinction between conscious mediation and subconscious mediation then the distinction between direct realism and indirect realism will be irrelevant. The distinction is very much about such a distinction.
I’m trying to distinguish between the perceiver and what he perceives. — NOS4A2
I'm suggesting that the way you're going about it is in terms of trying to assume a perspective or point of view outside both perceiver and perceived. You're trying to imagine the issue in objective terms. — Wayfarer
The way I'm approaching it is through nondualism. — Wayfarer
If Isaac is right then such a distinction cannot, on close examination, be maintained. The Cartesian Theatre is an illusion.I’m trying to distinguish between the perceiver and what he perceives. — NOS4A2
Seems to me that that is what a mirror is for. That is, once we see that "we ourselves are a part of the mystery that we are trying to solve" we might be able to take that into account, to make another iteration.'the eye cannot see itself'. — Wayfarer
I must take exception to the "just". The tree remains a tree, and even if it is a construct of our neural nets and shared grammar it is more than a mere "theory".The external states are just a theorised cause of that reality, a model of how it might have come about. — Isaac
Therefore I see myself seeing. — NOS4A2
No you’re not. You’re seeing an external image of an inner process. If you were in pain you would see your expression of pain in the mirror, but you wouldn’t see the pain in the mirror.
Seeing and pain are activities of the very same body that stands before the mirror. — NOS4A2
Yes, but from different perspectives, and here the matter of perspective is significant, surely. Nobody will say that an image of a grimacing face is the same as the first-person experience of pain, would they?
Why do you think that? — Isaac
I have been conditioned to believe that the act of seeing and that which sees is the same thing. I can see my eyes at the same time I use my eyes to see. Seeing and pain are activities of the very same body that stands before the mirror. — NOS4A2
. Brains cannot live, let alone perceive, on their own. So perception is an act of an organism, brains and all. — NOS4A2
Perception is either mediated by the perceiver, and thus direct, or it is mediated by something else, thus indirect. — NOS4A2
When I see a photo of a tree, I indirectly perceive the tree, but directly perceive the photo, for example. — NOS4A2
I must take exception to the "just". The tree remains a tree, and even if it is a construct of our neural nets and shared grammar it is more than a mere "theory". — Banno
When looking at a green tree, does the Direct Realist directly perceive the colour green or directly perceive the wavelength 500nm ? — RussellA
I suspect that he directly perceives all of the above, and everything else within his periphery. — NOS4A2
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