Not so much. If the smell is only a thing constructed by the mind, then there is no reasons that lemons might not on occasion smell like mint. The reason lemons smell like lemons is, put simply, that that is how lemons smell.That lemons smell like lemons is a vacuous claim — Michael
Done, here: Austin: Sense and Sensibilia and in a post back on page one of this thread.Then you're welcome to present Austin's arguments. — Michael
Plainly, for you, it isn't. Not my problem.I don't see how saying irrelevant things like "lemons smell like lemons" is helpful at all. — Michael
Sure, you can make up a story in which you talk like this.It's not the immediate object of their rational consideration. — Michael
One of these must be true:
1. The science of perception is correct and suggests that perception distorts reality
2. The science of perception is correct and suggests that perception does not distort reality
3. The science of perception is incorrect and suggests that perception distorts reality
4. The science of perception is incorrect and suggests that perception does not distort reality — Michael
The only contradiction is to argue that perception does not distort reality even though the science of perception suggests that it does. — Michael
Moving the negation. This has a different sense to @Michael'sThe science of perception is correct and does not suggest that perception distorts reality
bringing out yourThe science of perception is correct and suggests that perception does not distort reality
Perception sometimes distorts reality. We know this to be so because sometimes, it doesn't. Importantly, and you might agree that folk seem to keep missing this, we can only know that perception distorts reality if we know what is real.The unacknowledged assumption is that perception, being that upon which the science of perception is necessarily based, gives us an accurate picture of what is the case. — Janus
Perception sometimes distorts reality. We know this to be so because sometimes, it doesn't. Importantly, and you might agree that folk seem to keep missing this, we can only know that perception distorts reality if we know what is real. — Banno
"Perception sometimes distorts reality. We know this to be so because mostly, it doesn't". — Janus
I'm not sure what you're arguing for, that there is no real distinction between imaginings and sense perception? — Count Timothy von Icarus
But you've seemed to ignore my main point, which is that brains don't appear to "bookkeep" or produce any sort of experience in the vast majority of environments that exist in the universe. Nor do they develop the capability to experience things in isolation. A back and forth between the "enviornment"/"individual" barrier is essential for embryo development and essential for survival. E.g., a radical constriction of sensory inputs after birth leads to profound deficits in mammals, whereas a total constriction of sensory inputs would obviously require an enviornment that is going to kill any animal. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Nor do true dividing lines between different "things" seem to show up in the world upon closer inspection. If the mind "constructs" things, it surely appears to construct these boundaries. — Count Timothy von Icarus
relates toSo is salt water soluble in-itself or does water construct the solubility of salt? — Count Timothy von Icarus
...the whole 'things known "in-themselves"' issue. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Both the Indirect and Direct Realist must agree that the thought of "trees lining the banks" must be in the mind, otherwise how would the mind know about trees lining the bank in the first place. — RussellA
Both the Indirect and Direct Realist agree that there is something in the world causing us to perceive "trees lining the bank", as both believe in Realism.
The Indirect and Direct Realist differ in what the something is in the world that is causing us to perceive "trees lining the bank".
For the Direct Realist, in the world are trees lining the bank regardless of there being anyone to observe them, in that, if you look at the world you will perceive exactly the same thing as me.
This means that if we are both looking at the same trees lining the bank, we will both be perceiving the same thing.
This means that I will know what's in your mind at that moment in time.
For the Indirect Realist, in the world is something regardless of there being anyone to observe it. As what I perceive is a subjective representation of the something in the world, we may not be perceiving the same thing.
As I have never believed it possible to know what someone else is thinking, I am an Indirect rather than Direct Realist.
Because you have the concept of a bald cypress before looking at the river bank, you perceive a bald cypress.
As I don't have the concept of a bald cypress, all I perceive is a mass of green with some yellow bits.
Did the bald cypress exist before anyone looked at it? You know that a mass of green with some yellow bits is a bald cypress, but I don't know that...
So how can a bald cypress exist in the world independently of any mind to observe it, if the bald cypress only exists as a concept in the mind?
Once we hit page 20 we will surely be able to say what it is we are arguing about. :grin: — Leontiskos
Do we know yet? All I know for sure is the op's arguments are long forgotten — hypericin
Another argument in the OP is that because perception is a process we should not think of it as direct. That, if accepted would leave us with no coherent notion of 'indirect', since the terms is meaningless without some criterion of directness that it can serve as the negation of. — Janus
First, to echo Banno's question, what would the correlate to indirect, "direct," mean in the context of your claims? Apparently knowledge of the sandpaper without fingers, nerves, and brain processing would be direct? — Leontiskos
Apparently knowledge of the sandpaper without fingers, nerves, and brain processing would be direct? — Leontiskos
For example, if the indirect realist says that "direct" is as I have described it, this does provide a relevant foil, it's just that the foil is counterfactual and not actual. — Leontiskos
Well, the first step is to explain what it means to experience something directly and what it means to experience something indirectly. — Michael
So let's take olfactory experience. Do I smell a rose? Or do I smell the geraniol in the air, produced by the oils in a rose's petals? — Michael
After that, we should ask if there's such a thing as a correct smell. — Michael
Whereas the direct realist does not acknowledge this layer, to them the computer in my example would be the most direct layer. — hypericin
Since, according to scientific understanding, thinking, like perceiving, is a process, I don't see why it would not, on the indirect realist argument, equally qualify as indirect. — Janus
So you believe the direct realist would hold that the layer of sensory experience does not exist and therefore the computer layer is most "direct"? — Leontiskos
No, I think something more like sensory experience is not a distinct layer, but just a component part of perceiving. — hypericin
Some have asserted that our intellectual faculties know only the impression made on them; as, for example, that sense is cognizant only of the impression made on its own organ. According to this theory, the intellect understands only its own impression, namely, the intelligible species which it has received, so that this species is what is understood. This is, however, manifestly false for two reasons. . .
[...]
Therefore it must be said that the intelligible species is related to the intellect as that by which it understands: which is proved thus. . . — Thomas Aquinas, ST Ia.Q85.A2
As to the "intelligibility of nature' example, I think I agree with you since it would be absurd to demand that intelligibility be pointed to as an object of the senses. — Janus
One can imagine your creature's physiologist making the "discovery" that half the population sees things upside down, and their philosophers explaining carefully that no, they don't. — Banno
Not so much. If the smell is only a thing constructed by the mind, then there is no reasons that lemons might not on occasion smell like mint. — Banno
A 2011 study by Cornwall College found that sprouts contain a chemical, similar to phenylthiocarbamide, which only tastes bitter to people who have a variation of a certain gene. The research found that around 50 per cent of the world’s population have a mutation on this gene. The lucky half don’t taste the bitterness usually associated with sprouts, and therefore like them a whole lot more than everyone else.
Many millennia of being embedded in the world have granted sapiens in particular, and biological sight in general, the ability to receive information from their surroundings, including color. It is because organisms have been in the world and directly interacted with it this whole time that has allowed them to do so. I wager that had perception been at any time indirect, the evolution of perception would not have occurred at all and we’d still possess the perceptual abilities of some Cambrian worm. — NOS4A2
The very notion that perception, globally speaking, distorts reality is incoherent anyway, since it is only via perception that we get any notion of reality. Any supposed reality beyond the possibility of our perceiving it is, since unknowable, completely useless as a point of comparison. — Janus
They may even say that because we often shape and infuse meaning into sounds the meaning itself is more primary than the sounds. — Leontiskos
<The sense data is related to the intellect as that by which it understands [, not as that which is understood]> — Leontiskos
and your position would not have been called realism at all, because it terminates in perception and not in the real. — Leontiskos
Direct and indirect realists agree as to the physics and physiology. Their disagreement is not about the science.They're the ones actually studying how the world and perception works. — Michael
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