It might be best to simply follow along, as the book is attached to my post here. — Antony Nickles
He quibbles throughout, but then says that, according to the argument from illusion, sense-data is perceived directly. — NOS4A2
the argument from illusion is intended primarily to persuade us that, in certain exceptional, abnormal situations, what we perceive—directly anyway—is a sense-datum
I was just responding to the other members queries on the points. You got to give out your points as clearly as possible, if you had one, when asked, don't you? :) — Corvus
The argument for sense perceptions, or data, and qualia (and appearances, and particulars) have in common that we are problematizing sensing in a particular way—by abstraction from any setting—and creating one answer because we believe there is always a problem (and that we want to buffer ourselves from the possibility of any). — Antony Nickles
“Pure sensation” or “qualia” or whatever term you prefer is what we call the unabstracted perception, the unconceptualized sensation specific to one setting and one time. We then go on to “see X” based on what we’ve learned about how to see. I think Austin considers this issue of “seeing as . . .” later in the book. — J
But I may not be understanding you. How does any of this problematize sensing? — J
Very true. Of course not.It doesn't matter. — Ciceronianus
This applies also to direct/indirect realism. The danger for this thread is that the discussion becomes just another rendition of that tedious "he said/she said".(Austin) is not defending realism against antirealism, but rejecting the very distinction between these two. — Banno
The point Austin makes quite early seems to me to cover this:My problem is that I can't imagine what direct perception would be. — Ludwig V
You didn't see it directly, you saw it through a telescope, or a mirror, or only its shadow; how we are to understand "direct" perception depends entirely on what it is contrasted with; so of course it is difficult to imagine what "direct perception" is, per se. It's a nonsense, an invention of the defenders of the sort of argument Ayer is presenting. You can find examples in every thread on perception*.I. First of all, it is essential to realize that here the notion of perceiving indirectly wears the trousers- 'directly' takes whatever sense it has from the contrast with its opposite — p.15
Yes!Austin is specifically tearing down philosophy's framing of the issue as both direct or indirect. — Antony Nickles
Yep, Ciceronianus' Damascan cream pie in the face. A good philosophical account is compelling.Must admit Austin's writing style is super clear, and utterly logical. — Corvus
One of the prejudices I share with Austin is a dislike for specifically philosophical innovations. Talk of qualia mostly post dates Austin, but I suspect he would have spent some time pointing out that the term doesn't seem to achieve anything not already found in our ordinary talk of seeing and touching.Do we agree that “qualia” refer to actual phenomenological experience... — J
...that's from three years ago. I've had no reason to reconsider.Going over my own notes, I found an admission that I did not understand qualia - from 2012. In 2013, I said I do not think that there is worth in giving a name to the subjective experience of a colour or a smell. In 2014, I doubted the usefulness of differentiating a smell from the experience-of-that-smell. Never understood qualia. I still don't see their purpose. — Banno
The fact that we make mistakes, mis-identify, are tricked, and all the other things Austin explores, should point (as Austin does) to the ordinary ways by which we resolve those issues. Philosophy turns these instances into a intellectualized "problem" which underlies all cases, thus unconnected from our procedures and familiarity, because it can then have one solution, here "direct perception", or "qualia". — Antony Nickles
"the way things look is, in general, just as much a fact about the world, just as open to public confirmation or challenge, as the way things are. p 43 (emphasis added). How can it be only your perception when what you see incorrectly can be pointed out by me? — Antony Nickles
For my part my intent is to continue in the way I have been, reading a lecture or two ahead and then going back to re-read in more detail to make notes mostly for myself. Lecture IV will probably be very brief, then a bit more detail, or less, as we move into the later lectures, if I loose interest. If you want to move at a faster pace, go ahead, but I've found in the past that this leads to folk getting lost and needing to go over arguments again. — Banno
Austin is specifically tearing down philosophy's framing of the issue as both direct or indirect. — Antony Nickles
. The idea that we can, so to speak "peel off" the layers of interpretation to arrive at a purified, simple sensation seems to me a wild goose chase. That peeling off process is itself a process and the result will be another concept of the sensation which will be, paradoxically, itself a concept. There is no "before". (I wish I could construct the Austinian argument for this.)the unabstracted perception, the unconceptualized sensation specific to one setting and one time. — J
Yes - in the context of our mistakes. The argument from illusion, rightly seen, is not as persuasive as the more difficult cases. The more difficult problem is that, for example, Macbeth is behaving as if he sees a dagger, and not acting (pretending), so he believes that he sees a dagger. There's no (philosophical) problem until we remember that perceiving is always perceiving something. So we invent something to plug the apparent logical gap and create something that gives us philosophical certainty, and a morass of problems to go with it. That's my diagnosis of the conjuring trick, anyway.It’s just a question of what it is we are perceiving. — NOS4A2
If the law of identity holds, I cannot consider “the final place where the perceptual judgement took place” as perceived, because the brain is a component of the perceiver. Does X perceive Y, or does X perceive X? At any rate, neither precludes any intermediary. — NOS4A2
I think perspective - subject and object - is based on two main categories: — javi2541997
I don't really understand either of these models, but it is striking that Austin (so far, at least) doesn't directly consider them. — Ludwig V
It is a curious and in some ways rather melancholy fact that the relative positions of Price and Ayer at this point turn out to be exactly the same as the relative positions of Locke and Berkeley, or Hume and Kant. In Locke's view there are 'ideas' and also 'external objects', in Home's 'impressions' and also 'external objects', in Price's view 'sense-data' and also 'physical occupants'; in Berkeley's doctrine there are only ideas, in Kant's only Vorstellungen (things-in-themselves being not strictly relevant here), in Ayer's doctrine there are only sense-data-but Berkeley, Kant, and Ayer all further agree that we can speak as if there were bodies, objects, material things. Certainly, Berkeley and Kant are not so liberal as Ayer-they don't suggest that, so long as we keep in step with the sensible manifold, we can talk exactly as we please; but on this issue, if I had to take sides, I think I should side with them — Austin
We do not have to buy in to the argument that the tree falling in the forest when there is no-one to hear it does not make a sound. It depends what you choose to call a sound. — Ludwig V
It's interesting to watch ↪Corvus and ↪NOS4A2 attempting to fit the actual Austin in to the account that is so prevalent here, that indirect realism is about sensory apparatus, the way in which our eyes and brain process vision, and so direct realism must also be about sensory apparatus. Corvus in particular is finding that what Austin actually says does not match the common account of what an indirect realist should say. The hard part for them is going to be addressing the arguments Austin actually presents, and not re-dressing them so that they fit a preconfigured critique.
(Austin) is not defending realism against antirealism, but rejecting the very distinction between these two.
— Banno — Banno
He emphasises linguistic usage must be centred from ordinary people's usage, not philosophers' — Corvus
But if we agree on the fact that these sense organs are not the final perception location in the process, then they have to be the medium passing the sensed contents into the final location i.e. the brain. Therefore all perceptions are indirect. And we are not even talking about sense-datum at this point. — Corvus
Could you explain what that is? — frank
I see. So Austin doesn't want sense data because it interferes with the way he envisions the relationship between mind and world? — frank
As I see it, in Metaphysics, the Indirect Realism of Ayer is the more sensible approach. In Linguistic Idealism, the Direct Realism of Austin is the more sensible approach. As Austin is speaking from a position of Linguistic Idealism, Sense and Sensibilia should be read bearing this in mind. — RussellA
however people will rebut that it is the whole body and not just the brain so it’s direct in that this is how the human brain body processes the world, and you can’t get out of this as if from primary to secondary works of process integration. That’s just my guess. — schopenhauer1
Here we must consider first that it is not so much neither internal nor external but both that we are stuck with. — javi2541997
all perceptions are somehow indirect from the minimal perspective that for any human perception, — Corvus
I am still trying to understand the direct realist's account on perception. In what aspect perception is to be understood as direct and real? — Corvus
Linguistic Idealism — RussellA
however people will rebut that it is the whole body and not just the brain so it’s direct in that this is how the human brain body processes the world, — schopenhauer1
Linguistic Idealism may be described as the position that puts the mind at the centre of reality and language at the centre of the mind, and language does not represent the physical world as is often claimed but is the world itself. — RussellA
like an entire lecture on the word “real”. — NOS4A2
But we are not asking who or what is responsible for perception, but how perception works. — Corvus
Ayer wants us to take "something looks bent" and conclude that, therefore, something is bent; it's only by our being duped in this way that we will again be convinced of the existence of sense data. — Banno
Having gotten through Lecture IV: this is an example of where Austin takes a deep-dive into the differences between ordinary "uses" of words that philosophy takes as terms for a special purpose, but I think Austin somethings buries the point of all this. — Antony Nickles
the way things look is, in general, just as much a fact about the world, just as open to public confirmation or challenge, as the way things are. p 43 — Antony Nickles
I don't wish to dissuade you, indeed there is no alternative, as you must begin where your thoughts are now. The material we are considering takes some digestion, especially as much of it is contrary to what is usually taken as granted in these fora. But from what you have written here you have been following Austin's account well, which is far more than can be said for others.I was wanting to keep interacting from my own thoughts only on the topic — Corvus
I also hope that it will become clear that neither Austin nor I are making the claim that our perceptions are in some way always direct. Sometimes - periscopes and binoculars and mirrors - they are indirect, and in such situations we can understand what it would mean in contrast for them to be both direct and indirect.I am still trying to understand the direct realist's account on perception. In what aspect perception is to be understood as direct and real? — Corvus
No. But they might say that when you look at a cup, what you are seeing is the cup, and not some philosophical innovation such as sense data or qualia. That you are not a homunculus sitting inside a head, looking at the a screen projecting images of cups.Are they saying that what they sense and perceive from the external world are the true existence of the beings and the world with no possibility of being uncertain or inaccurate? — Corvus
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