Why isn't math also just brain activity ? — plaque flag
You said your hand is really something like strings from string theory. Is that correct ? — plaque flag
If superstring theory is correct. — Michael
I think the entities within the scientific image exist at the same time and in the same world as roses and promises and concepts. — plaque flag
But string theory is just math. It's something in consciousness like redness. — plaque flag
I'm just saying that colours, like pain, are a type of brain activity, not a property of apples. — Michael
I'm just saying that it's artificial to call color unreal — plaque flag
I think you're being pedantic here. If string theory is correct then the entities that the theory describes – superstring – are the constituents of all material things. — Michael
Semantic not pedantic. The scientific image is just that, an image, a model. But you seem to say that the map is the territory. That atoms are really there but color is not --- as if our nervous systems weren't giving you the idea of atoms indirectly like everything else (according to your theory.) — plaque flag
You think color is just in our head, right ? — plaque flag
I'm a scientific realist, not a scientific instrumentalist, if that's what you're getting at. — Michael
But what can the scientific realist mean — plaque flag
That the entities described by our scientific models are real and discovered rather than just instrumentally useful fictions. — Michael
The issue is that you call everything brain activity — plaque flag
No I don't. — Michael
Isn't indirect realism about a mediating image or consciousness which is not the Real itself ? Presumably created by the nervous system ? — plaque flag
Yes. Which is basically dualism, it seems to me. You experience sensation which you refer to (which represents or mediates) some forever hidden real.Sensation is the mediation. — Michael
Which is basically dualism, it seems to me. — plaque flag
No, because I'm saying that sensation is a type of brain activity. In the case of visual sensation, that brain activity involves the primary visual cortex. — Michael
Indirect realism has (1) images and (2) reality itself, right ? — plaque flag
Indirect realism is committed to a dualist picture within which there is an ontology of non-physical objects alongside that of the physical. — plaque flag
Indirect realism is committed to a dualist picture within which there is an ontology of non-physical objects alongside that of the physical. — plaque flag
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