I deny that anything happening in the body is the direct object of perception, “the perceived”. Rather, these are the actions of the body, “the perciever”. — NOS4A2
I’m not sure a direct realist position entails the argument that just by knowing an effect we are directly able to know its cause. Would you explain? — NOS4A2
There is a direction to causation, in that it is not the case that first there is an effect and later there is a cause. For example, first sunlight hits the leaves of a tree, then light travels from the leaf to our eyes which we can then sense as green. It is obviously not the case that we sense green, then light travels backwards from our eye to the leaf. There is a direction of causation as there is an arrow of time. — RussellA
Unless it is coupled with an independent basis for con fidence in reason, the evolutionary hypothesis is threatening rather than reassuring. It is consistent with continued confidence only if it amounts to the hypothesis that evolution has led to the existence of creatures, namely us, with a capacity for reasoning in whose validity we can have much stronger confidence than would be warranted merely from its having come into existence in that way. I have to be able to believe that the evolutionary explanation is consistent with the proposition that I follow the rules of logic because they are correct-not merely because I am biologically programmed to do so. But to believe that, I have to be justified independently in believing that they are correct. And this cannot be merely on the basis of my contingent psychol ogical disposition, together with the hypothesis that it is the product of natural selection. I can have no justification for trusting a reasoning capacity I have as a consequence of natural selection, unless I am justified in trusting it simply in itself believing what it tells me, in virtue of the content of the arguments it delivers. — Thomas Nagel, Evolutionary Naturalism and the Fear of Religion
I suspect an “objective property” is one that is public, available for anyone to measure. With this one needn’t eliminate an observer. — NOS4A2
the vast majority of creatures, other than h.sapiens, get along perfectly well in their environmental niche without any requirement for conceptual analysis. — Wayfarer
It means that anyone can observe the same properties if they were so inclined. These things would be the objects and systems we measure. Properties describe these things. — NOS4A2
What is a universe without any point of view? People insert themselves into the picture.. Often when we think of "a universe devoid of a point of view" we think of empty space, or images of planets with nothing else, or something like that. But that's not it either. "Events happening" with no epistemological element, is something we cannot compute. — schopenhauer1
I avoid strong metaphysical commitments by claiming a form of pragmatism. I don't need to know what or why just how. No matter what we belief about the nature of reality and being, as soon as we walk out the door we behave as naïve realists. At some level the games we can play with conceptual framing and language don't matter all that much. — Tom Storm
You are doing what I was saying we tend to do- inserting ourselves in the picture. You are coming at it from a post-facto manner. — schopenhauer1
I agree with you. Can we even talk about this subject without being hopelessly enmeshed in strictures of experience and our conceptual schemas?
Even language is a kind of sense that does not make actual contact with the things it is describing. Language's connection to reality seems as tenuous as that of visual perception. — Tom Storm
Why would I leave ourselves out of the picture? — NOS4A2
t's philosophy, and inherently messy subjects, so I say go for it. — schopenhauer1
The perceiver is required in order to formulate any theory of perception. If I leave it out there is no perception. I only which to understand from indirect realism the point at which the perceiver ends and the perceived begins, and whether something lies between them. — NOS4A2
Direct realism is simply that we are seeing a tree. — NOS4A2
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