After all, we receive a torrent of representative perceptual experience all the time, and most of it is unreflected upon. Only a small fraction receives attention, and anything like linguistic content. — hypericin
Representation without language and knowledge is still perceptual experience. But language and knowledge without representation is just language and knowledge. — hypericin
If most of the data is never brought to consciousness it does not seem apt to refer to it as "representation"; who is it being represented to? — Janus
Since language and knowledge are inherently representative, I can't see how we could have language and knowledge without representation. — Janus
Perceptual experience represents the world, to conscious awareness. We are aware of a gestalt of perceptual experience, and can choose to attend to a tiny slice of it. — hypericin
I was referring to perceptual experience as representation. I changed "representation" in the quote to perceptual experience for clarity. — hypericin
To me, because it seems most plausible, because we seem to have no cogent reason to doubt, that thoughts are neural events, then I count them as real and causal. — Janus
Right, so those parts of sense which are not attended to, not conscious, are not representations, but are presumably unconscious physical, neural effects. — Janus
...my senses will never be given my neural events... — Mww
If however perception for you entails the kind of representational perception we use, where the brain generates a virtual world for the centralized decision maker to evaluate and respond to, then perception is inherently indirect. — hypericin
Here is an example of disqualifying us from directly perceiving by using our biological machinery and how they work as reason.
Makes no sense to me.
Touching the fire, on your view, is not directly perceiving the fire. Nonsense. — creativesoul
No, you are missing the distinction between "not attended to" and "not conscious". Think of looking at a painting. You are aware of the visual gestalt of the whole painting, but you can only attend to an aspect of it, maybe the main theme of the painting. Then you can choose to focus on other details. — hypericin
I’m sticking with the notion that my senses will never be given my neural events, from which follows I can never represent a real-time, first order neural event as a phenomenon. As for every single possible real object ever given to my senses, every single one of them will be represented as a phenomenon. Thoughts are represented, but as conceptions, not as phenomena, and this is sufficient to mark the validity of the distinction between the real of things, re: neural events, and the not-real of abstract conceptions, re: thoughts. — Mww
what the brain does in its manufacture of our thoughts, in no way relates to what is consciously done with them. — Mww
This is not necessarily weaker, just different. It seems more accurate to say that perceptual experience is a representation, and that language and knowledge might be stimulated by the perceptual experience, or might not, depending on whether we attend to it . — hypericin
Perceptual experience without language and knowledge is still perceptual experience. But language and knowledge without perceptual experience is just language and knowledge. — hypericin
This is not nitpicking, these distinctions are crucial to the discussion. If knowledge of an object is part of the perceptual experience itself, it may be considered as immediate as the representation. But if it only follows/stimulated from the representation, then this seems implausible — hypericin
Moreover, if a perceptual experience is a representation (or is a representation plus language), then we do not have a perceptual experience of this representation.
— Luke
Agreed — hypericin
I'm confused about what would it take to qualify as direct perception to those who argue for indirect.
Anyone here have an answer?
— creativesoul
I have an answer no one has given yet that I think is the correct one: lower organisms that do not use representational perception perceive directly.
Think of an amoeba, light hits a photo receptor, and by some logic the amoeba moves one way or the other.
If you regard this as "perception", then this is direct perception. — hypericin
I'm confused about what would it take to qualify as direct perception to those who argue for indirect.
Anyone here have an answer? — creativesoul
Why must one know what it is they are perceiving in order to be perceiving it? That makes no sense. — creativesoul
Senses include neural events. — creativesoul
…..the grim specter of dualism looms with all its problems and aporias. — Janus
Sure, and perceptual experience might also include, and/or be affected by, expectation, environmental conditions, and other stuff too. — Luke
If you agree that our perceptual experience is not of a representation (i.e. is not of itself), then what do we have a perceptual experience of? Odour molecules? — Luke
No straight answers or arguments or anything interesting, so nothing to respond to... — Janus
colours are obviously visual sensations. 'seeing a colour' is that sensation — AmadeusD
Colours are a sensation (well, a class of sensations, anyway). Read into that what you will, using your own grammar — AmadeusD
The experience is of odor molecules. The whole point is we have no direct awareness of what experience is of. This is very obvious in the case of smell; until recently we didn't know odor molecules existed at all. All we are directly aware of is the smell, by way of which we are indirectly aware of odor molecules. — hypericin
Of course, but neural events are not that which is given to the senses to be represented. Neural events in the senses just are the representations the senses afford. — Mww
Touching the fire, on your view, is not directly perceiving the fire. Nonsense.
— creativesoul
Yup. That's the way it is, your common sense opinions notwithstanding. — hypericin
the perceptual experience or representation is directly of worldly objects — Luke
Whereas I would call the perceptual experience the perception, you want to include an additional step and call your awareness of the perceptual experience the perception. — Luke
Of course that's 'the way it is', because I merely stated a consequence of what you're arguing for. If you believe that touching fire is not directly perceiving fire, then there's not much more I can say. — creativesoul
Of course that's 'the way it is', because I merely stated a consequence of what you're arguing for. If you believe that touching fire is not directly perceiving fire, then there's not much more I can say.
— creativesoul
You are not making arguments, but merely appealing to common sense. There are venues where appeals to common sense carry some weight, this is not one of them. — hypericin
the only part of this process the subject is directly aware of is the perceptual experience.
you haven't given a straight answer. — Janus
Colours are a sensation — AmadeusD
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.