He will happily talk about not seeing objects, but seeing light — Banno
1. All knowledge comes either from sensory perception (e.g., visually perceiving a mountain) or reasoning (e.g., solving an algebraic equation).
2. Both perception and reasoning occur in our minds.
3. The external world is, by definition, “external,” which is outside our minds.
Therefore:
4. Because everything we know exists in our minds, we can not have any knowledge about the external world. — Thales
What is the light reflected/refracted by?
— wonderer1
No idea. My part in the process(and as such, the point at whcih I could say anything about it) comes after that, as best I can tell. I could say "the objects" but then im stuck with literally nothing else to say about it. — AmadeusD
My experience off this forum has me tending toward thinking the poison is quite well contained here — AmadeusD
And yet here you argue that you don't know anything about the world around you. So I don't know why we should take you seriously when you talk about experience off the forum. — wonderer1
My experience off this forum has me tending toward thinking the poison is quite well contained here :) — AmadeusD
using this forum for longer than me — Beverley
I was intimating the 'poison' was confined to the forum. — AmadeusD
(Sigh) — Mww
Perception does not occur in the mind; it occurs in the senses. — Mww
What is done with what the senses inform you of, is in the mind. — Mww
Kinda silly to trip over the dog, but only credit the dog’s existence to the inference there was something there to trip over. — Mww
If you tripped over the dog it means you didn’t know it was there — Mww
I do not think I agree here. I think, ala Kant, this is how we perceive. Using a priori concepts, logically consistent as to allow for possible experience, to organise sensory information into an experience.inference is a logical maneuver, and there is no logic whatsoever in perception. — Mww
wasn’t it more fun to read that what’s passed as philosophical discourse here recently? — Mww
We are biological entities, engendered and evolved in a physical environment, governed by and dependent for survival on the same physical laws as are all the inanimate and animate entities in that 'outside world'. Being delimited by a thin layer of dermis and epithelium does not truly divide us from the physical world of which we are a product and in which we live.
Before we evolved to the point of being able to perceive and reason, we received sensory input and nourishment from that same physical outside; we responded to it, interacted with it, injected waste products into it, manipulated and altered it.
Why should be we not be able to say how we experience it, now that we can enhance, measure and articulate our sensory input? — Vera Mont
I would need to ask though, is that enough for you to say we 'see' those objects? — AmadeusD
….perception is what is done with the sensory information to create the experience…. — AmadeusD
Where is the mechanism by which we 'directly' access these objects? — AmadeusD
This was the very first response in the discussion and it might still be the best one. It eschews a direct engagement with the OP's argument and instead offers a better conceptual framework (or paradigm or what have you), one that can replace the worn out assumptions of the early moderns. Philosophical advances tend to be made that way, rather than with direct point-by-point refutations.
The OP begins in the head. Vera is saying, let's begin in the world. My question is for everyone here: is there a serious problem with this?
Cognition is what is done with sensory information. — Mww
we have the capacities and abilities by which things are given access to us — Mww
do you see how the thread title is backwards? — Mww
its likely we are speaking the same metaphysical language here — AmadeusD
I really, really like this formulation…. — AmadeusD
Much appreciated — AmadeusD
the back-and-forth between radical sceptics and their opponents is perennial, rather than just a debate of the modern period. — Jamal
It follows that anything given to the mind, meaning anything exchanging domain from the external as one energy form, to the internal in a very different energy form, something will be lost in the transition. — Mww
the mind creates or generates or composes of its own accord all the data with which it is concerned — Mww
Might just be a matter of time spent on study. — Mww
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