Let's imagine you say, "That is a tree." What does "that" refer to? Do you begin to see the difficulty? If it's another interpretation, then you never escape from an endless chain of interpretation. On the other hand, if there is something about the tree that is not merely interpreted by you, then you have a grasp of reality not interpreted. — timw
No, I don't see the difficulty. The endless chain of interpretation is avoided by the assumption. For me, it's the assumption that there is actually something there which is being interpreted. For others it is the assumption that the interpretation is somehow, in itself, correct..... The interesting thing is that the further we delve into the nature of this reality, what you call "that," with science, the more we come to realize that none of these basic assumptions are actually correct. So we may be left with the realization that the closer to absolutely nothing we can come with our assumptions, leaving it all to interpretation, the closer to understanding reality we get. But even this is just an assumption, it doesn't really qualify as a grasp of reality. — MU
So the question: how do you bridge the gap between object and perception, or alternatively, how do you get from interpretation to reality? — timw
There is no gap to bridge, as you describe. Reality is within us, the objects are created within us, in interpretation. This all is what Plato described in the cave analogy. The gap which needs to be bridged is the separation between each one of us and the reality which is within us. This we bridge with language, and by creating concepts such as "the world", giving each person a place in "the world". But this unified "world" having us positioned within it is something created by us, and as such it is just a reflection of the reality which is within each one of us. Within each one of us is a different, but real perspective. There is also real separation between us, and this justifies the claim that there is difference between us. The assumption is dualist because there are real thinking minds, and a real separation between them, two distinct aspects of reality. There is no gap between interpretation and reality because these are just two different aspects of reality, interpreter, and what is being interpreted. Getting to know the nature of the separation between us is what bridges the gap between us, creating unity and a unified "world". — MU
That is a tree." What does "that" refer to? Do you begin to see the difficulty? If it's another interpretation, then you never escape from an endless chain of interpretation. On the other hand, if there is something about the tree that is not merely interpreted by you, then you have a grasp of reality not interpreted. — timw
It is interpretation all the way down. But also, part of what we then experience is the recalcitrant nature of our experiences. So every time we open our eyes, the tree is still there. — apokrisis
If it's all interpretation, how do you know? — tim wood
You can't know. But it is a hypothesis you can adopt and test. — apokrisis
...and have no access to anything but interpretation... — tim wood
Our brains are locked up in our skull; there is no way for the brain to directly access anything outside the skull, except chemical signals that are delivered by blood from elsewhere in the body. — Bitter Crank
And it's all a construction (but not a one-off construction -- the brain revises the construction all the time.) — Bitter Crank
Comment and discussion welcome. — tim wood
I don't think of "reality" as being constructed by the brain, I don't think of it as "construction" at all, but as a collaboration involving the environment and the body (the brain being merely a part of the latter). The collaboration is ever changing, just as the environment and the body are constantly changing. — Janus
My point is that you in fact have access to two things - your general theory and your particular acts of measurement. So this allows for a process of triangulation. — apokrisis
I dare say the question about the reality of the objects of the senses is an artificial latecomer. There is really no sense in which it can be definitively answered, which rather seems to make asking it a waste of time and energy. — Janus
It seems odd to think of the body as being discontinuous, separate, from the environment. You seem to be thinking of "direct access" in terms of some kind of 'prime-itive' intuition of it as being analogical to touching objects with the skin. — Janus
I don't think of "reality" as being constructed by the brain, I don't think of it as "construction" at all, but as a collaboration involving the environment and the body (the brain being merely a part of the latter). The collaboration is ever changing, just as the environment and the body are constantly changing. — Janus
Well, on your account these are realities - which you have ruled out. In particular, you (apparently) think they persist across time, but what makes you think so? — tim wood
My point here is simply that to insist there's no access to reality is to be entangled with a set of arcane presuppositions that predate Kant.
I'd like to sharpen this a bit: my position is that there is a reality that we perceive, that grounds our perception, such that we can know the reality and make true statements about it. — tim wood
But the interpretive function of the brain -- the making sense of everything -- is inside the skull. — Bitter Crank
Well. Kant took a shot at it. Maybe he's why you can write a phrase like "objects of the senses" and think you understand it. — tim wood
My point here is simply that to insist there's no access to reality is to be entangled with a set of arcane presuppositions that predate Kant.
On your account, your and my agreement as to a tree is simply a coinciding of interpretations and nothing more (and how would we know?!). My position is that your account is an incomplete account, and at the least fails to account for the tree or how we can agree?
Agreed. Duration that we live in it's a process, and in this process we are constantly interacting with all that is around us and in this process creating memories which are equally fluid. Memories define who we are and are the source of future actions/choices.
It is an ongoing process. This is the real time that we experience and call it life. — Rich
I'm not convinced the notion of interpretation being in the brain even makes sense. There may be neuronal activities in the brain that are correlated with interpretative activities, but I don't see how those activities can be artificially cordoned off, so to speak, from the activities (cellular, muscular, electrochemical, and so on) of the whole body — Janus
nor how the activities of the whole body can coherently be separated from the energetic environmental processes that they are responses to. — Janus
I think this is certainly true in part, but I don't believe it can be the whole story. I think we are also influenced by what we don't remember, and were perhaps never even aware of. — Janus
But, as it happens, the brain is in charge. — Bitter Crank
Again, I've ruled reality in by making it a testable belief. — apokrisis
Our agreement about the tree is on account of the characteristics of the tree and the similar structures of our human senses. The question that cannot be answered is the one as to the ultimate metaphysical status of the tree, — Janus
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