For touch, the middle man (by analogy, rather than "this is my position") is the nervous system, surely? — AmadeusD
I can't get past the experience of that touch being mediated by, say, electric impulse/CNS activity which is not the thing, ferrying a 'message' of that direct physical touch, to the mind for examination in 'feeling'. — AmadeusD
Saying that John smells smoke doesn't explain what it means for John to smell smoke.
And yet I see and talk about Joe Biden without ever being anywhere near him. The point I am making is that this supposed connection between what I see (and talk about) and the (meta)physics/epistemology of perception is a false one. You're getting stuck on an irrelevancy.
Pain is very real. I don't know what else to say. You're lucky if you've never felt it.
Isn't this a homunculus argument? — Banno
experience? — Banno
A common response that is wrong. No one sees photons. Folk might well see using or because of photons. But photons are not visible.
It's very important to get the language right here. Sure, you see your hand because it reflects photons, but you do not see the photons. — Banno
Hence I call this whole information transfer from object to retina an "indirect" transfer. — Quk
It might be better if I were to let you two discuss the topic for a bit.Perhaps you could attempt to provide what I'm missing - no one seems to want to engage directly with the problem (i.e where is the 'direct' connection between the object at the experience?)... — AmadeusD
There is an alternative, which is to reject the juxtaposition of direct and indirect experiences entirely, and admit that we do sometimes see (hear, touch, smell...) things as they are; and that indeed this is essential in order for us to be able to recognise those occasions in which we see (hear, touch, smell...) things in the world erroneously. — Banno
It might be better if I were to let you two discuss the topic for a bit. — Banno
may have gone unnoticed — Banno
ut why not reject the very framing of the argument in those terms — Banno
No one seems to disagree that there's Object -> Sense organ Engagement -> a physical process of electrical impulse through the CNS, which are essentially decoded by the brain and presented to the mind as an experience. No one has presented me any reason to think otherwise and I cannot get on with calling that 'direct'. — AmadeusD
For touch, the middle man (by analogy, rather than "this is my position") is the nervous system, surely?
— AmadeusD
Can this be filled out? Would you say that you don't touch the wall, you touch your nervous system? That doesn't seem right. — Banno
The scientist proceeds to "hook up" a subject to a machine, gives the subject a ball, and records the activity of the nerves to the brain. The scientist solicits a reply from the subject that he is in contact with a ball. — Richard B
But what if the statement about minds and perception are the same as whether or not our physical bodies really physically touch other physical bodies? — Moliere
feedback — Ashriel
but the indirect/direct realist distinction is foolish — Moliere
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