These are explanations for phenomena used to support indirect realism which don't resort to the position of indirect realism — Moliere
I think "information" counts as kind of idealism, if you're positing it as a kind of fundamental substance that everything is composed of. — Moliere
Isn't that pretty much what the topic of indirect or naive realism is about? Fundamental metaphysics? — Moliere
I'm uncertain of the best way to put it, but at the very least what it means is that though direct realists directly perceive objects in the world that does not then entail that what they see is a fixed property, or that there are not other properties which a given perception is not perceiving.
It's mostly the notion of permanent objects and their essences that I'd try to avoid -- things are in constant flux. — Moliere
- a term of art meant to contrast with "properties", is what I was thinking. — Moliere
Perhaps this is a way of differentiating the naive from the direct realist: I think the naive realist is seeing something real, that literal objects are a part of their experience, but that does not then mean that every judgment about that real thing which a naive realist makes is going to be true or comprehensive. — Moliere
While I've come to discount the notion of an information ontology, you're far from alone in thinking like that. — Moliere
in a sense I'd say that every judgment has a dual-awareness -- the judgment ,and what the judgment is about) — Moliere
But how do we really differentiate which is the better way to talk? — Moliere
To me, it's just obvious that the brain is creating a unified experience out of a flood of discrete sensory input. I think for some, that's direct realism. I don't see how, but ok? — frank
What do you think "perceive mental phenomena" means? Do you think it means that my eyes respond to light reflected by mental phenomena? Do you think it means that my ears respond to sound emitted by mental phenomena? — Michael
I think you're reading something into the meaning of "perceive mental phenomena" that just isn't there. Indirect realists probably aren't saying what you think they're saying when they say that we perceive mental phenomena. Acquaintance with mental phenomena is the appropriate interpretation. — Michael
This is how to interpret the meaning of "feel" in "I feel pain" and the meaning of "hear" in "the schizophrenic hears voice" and the meaning of "see" in "I see colours". — Michael
This sense of acquaintance with mental phenomena occurs also in veridical perception, and this is all that is meant when the indirect realist says that awareness of distal objects is mediated by awareness of mental phenomena. — Michael
Yes, I think something along these lines is required when talking about perceiving something, especially since the main point of contention in this debate is whether our sensory perception of external objects is direct or indirect. — Luke
What all is involved? That’s gonna be a pretty long list, I should think, depending on what one thinks experience is. In my world, experience is an end, the terminus of the human speculative intellectual methodology, from which follows, all that is involved for that end, is the sum of the means necessary for the attainment of it. — Mww
ndirect realists don't believe or claim that our eyes respond to light reflected by mental phenomena and that our ears respond to sound emitted by mental phenomena, so you clearly misunderstand indirect realism and are arguing against a strawman. — Michael
Are those constituents of experience? — creativesoul
Hence, we've arrived at incoherency/self-contradiction. — creativesoul
Have you abandoned the eliminative materialist approach in favor of a sense data theorist one? — creativesoul
Indirect realists don't believe or claim that our eyes respond to light reflected by mental phenomena and that our ears respond to sound emitted by mental phenomena, so you clearly misunderstand indirect realism and are arguing against a strawman. — Michael
Hence, we've arrived at incoherency/self-contradiction.
— creativesoul
How so? — Michael
It's not odd at all. We build it to measure the wavelength of light and then program it to output the word "red" if the wavelength measures 700nm.
Are you asking if I'm aware that eliminative materialism and property dualism are incompatible? Yes, I'm aware. I'm undecided between them, but my inclination favours property dualism although I'm open to eliminative materialism. — Michael
How is Russellian acquaintance with mental representations of external objects an indirect perception? Russellian acquaintance is not a perception, so it cannot be an indirect perception of an external object. — Luke
This is where you're getting confused by grammar. The words "see" and "experience" and "perceive" and "aware" are all being used ambiguously and interchangeably. — Michael
Light is color. — creativesoul
Arguing for them both results in saying incompatible things when compared to one another. Have you been arguing for both throughout this thread, at different times arguing for one, and then the other later? — creativesoul
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