I see things when I am asleep. Some people have defects where they cannot. Are you one of them? — I like sushi
I see things when I am asleep. — I like sushi
Are you referring to Innatism, Enactivism, Kant's a priori intuition, etc, in that life has evolved in synergy with the world for at least 3.5 billion years. I agree, if you are. — RussellA
I see things when I am asleep. — I like sushi
This must be quite a skill. If I find you sleeping and held a stick in front of your face you would able to see it. I bet your peeking. — Richard B
No doubt I'll be corrected if wrong, but I think the reference is to dreaming. — Janus
The whole time we are staring at the back of our eyelids. — NOS4A2
At some level all perception is direct. For the direct realist, the man directly perceives a tree. X directly perceives Y. — NOS4A2
something within the man (the mind, the brain, a little man) directly perceives something else within the man (sense data, representation, idea) — NOS4A2
I always took “unmediated” to mean that nothing else is intervening in the relationship between perceiver and perceived. In other words there is no veil or buffer or experience between man and tree. I could be wrong on that and appreciate any other formulation. — NOS4A2
If we can perceive it we ought to be able to point to it, because for anything to be perceptible (perceivable?) it must have some scope and position in time and space. — NOS4A2
The problem is, whenever we try to examine the nature of sense-data, experience, impressions, we end up examining a person’s brain or some other loci within the body. We are invariably examining the perceiver in search of the perceived, as if they were one and the same, or one was inside the other. — NOS4A2
I'm not sure I see the problem. If you and me are next to each other and we are looking at the Empire State Building, I can point to it and say "that's the Empire State Building". I can only assume - all else being equal - that you will see something very similar to what I see. There's no way to literally get into somebody else's head, but, daily experience seems to show we see things similarly.
If you are interested in how the brain works, that's the topic of neuroscience and cognitive science. You aren't going to find an entity "the self" in the brain, even if such constructions originate there - with interplay with the environment of course.
I think I may be missing something, or probably am missing something.
“The general doctrine, generally stated, goes like this: we never see or otherwise perceive (or 'sense'), or anyhow we never directly perceive or sense, material objects (or material things), but only sense-data (or our own ideas, impressions, sensa, sense-perceptions, percepts, &c.).” — NOS4A2
Right, there is no self living in the brain viewing experiences and perceptions. So indirect realism is redundant. That’s the basic point. — NOS4A2
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