Hoffman would posit that humans have evolved a tailored and limited account of reality which assists us in survival. — Tom Storm
Interestingly, Alvin Plantinga takes this idea to show how evolutionary ideas undermine naturalism. — Richard B
What do we want in a scientific theory of consciousness? Consider the case of tasting basil versus hearing a siren. For a theory that proposes that brain activity causes conscious experiences, we want mathematical laws or principles that state precisely which brain activities cause the conscious experience of tasting basil, precisely why this activity does not cause the experience of, say, hearing a siren, and precisely how this activity must change to transform the experience from tasting basil to, say, tasting rosemary. These laws or principles must apply across species, or else explain precisely why different species require different laws. No such laws, indeed no plausible ideas, have ever been proposed. — Donald D. Hoffman
it acknowledges there are no physical laws governing mental causation — Wayfarer
I think you are saying not only "the scientist perceives an event in their laboratory" as an inference, but "the laboratory" itself can only ever be an inference. This is an absurdity derived from a grammatical fiction. — Richard B
"The tree has three branches" is very different from "I perceive the tree to have three branches". Idealism is the conflation of the two. — Banno
But see 308 and 309. — Banno
I think you will need a stronger argument against Indirect Realism than it is absurd, as, as Searle writes, Direct Realism was not supported by the great geniuses of philosophy. — RussellA
For both the Indirect and Direct Realist, there is something in a mind independent external world. The Direct Realist knows that this something is a tree with three branches. The Indirect Realist knows that they perceive a tree with three branches, but doesn't know what this something is in the external world. — RussellA
What is your answer? I have checked a few other messages/comments that follow your description of the topic but couldn't find it. Maybe you have already exposed it somewhere in this thread, but there are 17 pages in it and I cannot read all your message. Sorry. So, can you give me the link of a message in which you expose your answer?The answer to this question seems obvious — NOS4A2
Can a perceived object also perceive you?Who perceives what? If we were to remove both those things from the man, both the perceiver and the perceived, place them on a table next to each other for observation, what would be there? Would there be one object or two? And could one be said to be perceiving the other? — NOS4A2
Most probably, you mean an entitity, a living organism. Which is a special case. You can't generalize it and apply it to inanimate things, can you? This is what I meant.Yes, a perceived object can perceive me so long as it is capable of perceiving. — NOS4A2
Most probably, you mean an entitity, a living organism. Which is a special case. You can't generalize it and apply it to inanimate things, can you? This is what I meant.
I perceive my perceptions. — Benj96
As Searle says in his conclusion, the core of the bad argument is to "...think that somehow or other, the experiences are themselves the object of the experiences". — Banno
I prefer my waffles with honey.I think if it sort of in the analogy that 0 neither perceives nor is perceived. However 0 can = - 1 + 1 (where - 1 can perceive +1 or +1 can percieve - 1), or both simultaneously. — Benj96
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