I disagree that the existence of objective reality is a matter of fact. To me it's a matter of viewpoint. Sometimes it's useful, sometimes it's misleading. If it's true, then the Tao doesn't exist, which of course it doesn't. That's what I like about Lao Tzu - he acknowledges the unspeakability of reality. The view that there is no such thing as objective reality is not an uncommon one. I've participated in several such discussions here on the forum. — T Clark
Those are matters of fact within a particular metaphysical system. — T Clark
For a minute, let’s discuss what I want metaphysics to be, but which it probably isn’t. At least not entirely – I want it to be the set of rules, assumptions we agree on to allow discussion, reason, to proceed e.g. there is a knowable external, objective reality; truth represents a correspondence between external reality and some representation of it; it’s turtles all the way down; the Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao — T Clark
So, anyway - Metaphysical questions cannot be addressed with yes or no answers. They’re not issues of right or wrong, what matters is usefulness. — T Clark
...For me it's not. The existence of procedural, foundational concepts that set the terms of all discussions is central to my idea of what philosophy is. I want to be able to talk about it — T Clark
I want a cudgel of metaphysics I can take out and beat my opponents with. (stomps feet, pounds table, face turns red). All you big boys and girls get to say "Kant said this" and "Aristotle wrote that," while all I get to say is "seems to me." — T Clark
Failure to understand that words are not reality. — T Clark
So something that's credible is "worthy of our ascent?" Does that mean "true?" "Probably true." This is getting a bit circular. — T Clark
Here's a definition of "justification" from the web - The action of showing something to be right or reasonable. In this context, justification is an answer to the question "How do you know that?" Example - I say "John stole the money." You say "How do you know that?" I say "He told me he did it." It doesn't mean it's definitely true, only that I have good reason to believe it. — T Clark
We are justified in holding a belief, or we are not. There is no percentage roll that makes a belief more or less justified. It simply is, or isn't. — Moliere
If I say a possible event has a high probability I mean I am very confident it will happen, and that I will not be at all surprised if it does happen, and fairly surprised if it doesn't. — andrewk
credibility boils down to another measure of confidence. — andrewk
The test is use, the criteria being, does it work? — tim wood
you might try defining your terms — tim wood
What does it mean that a belief is "credible?" Doesn't it mean there is justification for it? — T Clark
Aren't you just recapitulating Descartes? I think I probably am therefore I am. — T Clark
It's useless to look for a tool if you don't know what the job is. Especially for a tool that does everything: that tool doesn't exist. Also, belief is almost always a sign that both certainty and probability are out the window — tim wood
Aristotle covered this (from Nicomachean Ethics, but I can't find the quote I'm looking for): it's a mistake to look for more clarity than a subject matter will allow. — tim wood
Do we need a philosophy? — Philosopher
What philosophical questions are you interested in and why? — Philosopher
philosophy as a science. — Philosopher
Are you suggesting that there's an alternative approach to the problem, or that the problem isn't really a problem at all? — Michael
Edmund Gettier made the following two assumptions:
1) b is a justified, true belief (JTB-definition of knowledge)
2) b is not knowledge
And therefore, JTB theory is false.
However, this is circular reasoning. Nowhere did Gettier actually prove that b is not knowledge. Gettier's own examples are evidence of knowledge being justified true beliefs. — BlueBanana
Count them. Seriously, just count them. Think of all the times when you've proceeded as if your sense perceptions have been correct, and your desires and expectations have been fulfilled by proceeding on the assumption that they're correct, versus the times you misperceived. You get up in the morning, you see what looks like a toothbrush, you pick it up and find you can brush your teeth with it. You reach for what looks like a door handle and find you can use it to open the door and get out of the house. You go to the train station, you step into what looks like a train and you find it's taken you to what looks like your place of work, which look like it has your workstation, where indeed the work is as you remember leaving it, etc., etc., etc. Maybe on the way home you encounter a situation like this:-
"I thought I saw a banker's clerk descending from a bus,
I looked again and saw it was a hippopotamus."
So there you have a whole slew of desires and expectations fulfilled by taking sense perceptions as veridical, and you have one misperception, one expectation baulked. The ratio I'd say is par for the course for the average day. — gurugeorge
It's really more that the sceptic or the endless why-questioner isn't quite getting the game. "Why" questions have a limited ambit, always, they're delimited in a given universe of discourse, against a background in which some things are accepted as true. The extrapolation and extension is basically just continually moving the goalposts. — gurugeorge
It seems to me that we are begging the question, as does the formulation 'I think therefore I am'.
What sort of argument is that? Plainly, the conclusion is entailed in the premise! So is the bit after 'therefore' telling us something new? Is 'I am' something more than 'this thought'? If it is, we need something more, some additional premise. Or is it only saying 'I' is synonymous with 'this thought'? — Londoner
Because, if it is only meant as a synonym, that 'I' seems to quickly take on extra meanings. For example, we shift to talking of 'consciousness', something that is distinct to the 'thought' , we have 'awareness', we have 'particular thoughts', all of which are assuming notions of perception, of personal continuity through time, that were not there in the single original 'a thought'. — Londoner
Indeed, there is no need for a 'you' to be involved at all, that reaction to the bacon need be no different in kind to a chemical reaction, where we find no need to posit that there is a 'you' within each chemical that is 'having' that reaction. Or, if we did extend 'you' to such things, that is not the sort of 'you' we were trying to get to, the one with 'consciousness'. — Londoner
But if it is 'before your mind' then you are not directly acquainted with it. We would have two separate things, subject (your mind) and object (your thought). 'Consciousness' would then just be another object of perception and we certainly can doubt any object of perception. Or if we can't, why wouldn't it apply equally to any object before our mind? 'I see a doughnut, therefore I exist'. — Londoner
In practice I am always conscious-of some thing, I am always thinking-of some thing. — Londoner
To conclude from 'I think' that 'I exist' — Londoner
It's deductive inference. This goes back to my point that we posit (punt, bet, conjecture) identities (natures, essences, etc.) for things, then we deduce what ought to eventuate for experience if we have identified the thing correctly (i.e. if the thing has the identity, nature or essence that we think it has) and then we check experience to see if things pan out as we'd expect them to if the thing has the identity we're positing for it.
So for example, if it's a piece of paper, which like all material things, is defined as having the property of existing while we're not perceiving it, then (we deduce that) a camera ought to inform us of the fact that it exists while we don't perceive it. — gurugeorge
Now in all the above, I can sense you champing at the bit: you no doubt want to say, "But aren't sense perceptions being used in the very process of checking out whether sense perceptions are reliable?" This seems to be homing in on our disagreement even more: somehow, you think this is circular. But why?) — gurugeorge
And you can show that sense perception is in fact reliable because you can distinguish reliable perceptions from unreliable ones, and show that we have more reliable ones than unreliable ones: — gurugeorge
Btw, I can't resist it: if Descartes relentlessly asks "why?" then ultimately he's in the position of the child relentlessly asking "why?" in the comedian Louis CK's skit, and his intelocutor is entitled to lose patience with him at some point: "WHY? Aw fuck you, eat your french fries you little shit, goddamit." — gurugeorge
So why is it rational to doubt without reason, yet not to believe without reason? — Banno
But philosophy consists in words, so a philosophical discussion ought take words seriously — Banno
We use them at least in part, in combination with a desire, to provide explanations for behaviour. — Banno
the only reason why you think you were subject to an illusion (or why Descartes noticed he'd been in error about various things) is because of some corrective perception that reveals that your previous perception was an illusion. Therefore you're already implicitly allowing the validity of at least some sense perceptions: the corrective sense perceptions at least must be valid, for the illusion to be genuinely an illusion. Therefore you can't use the argument from illusion to globally doubt the validity of sense perception on the basis that sometimes you're subject to illusion. — gurugeorge
you are creating an internally-consistent projection or model of how the world is, that you then test against eventuating reality. There's mathematical certainty, deductive certainty, within the model and the implications for testing that you can draw from it. But you can never be certain that the model you're using is the right model for the occasion. — gurugeorge
an anomaly crops up in experience, which means that there must be something wrong with the model you've been assuming to be true up till now; so then you figure out some other possible model for the world, and match your two models against each other, and filter the right one out on the basis of homely, perceptual level truths (measurements, meter readings, etc.) that you are less doubtful about. — gurugeorge
I think that it's a little sloppy to split "tree" into types -- it's not like "dream tree" and "real tree" are species of the genus "tree". "Real" does not work exactly in that way. Even when it comes to a logical display of these terms it's not a matter of kinds and categories, but is an operator which ranges over a domain -- some set. — Moliere
I'd probably hesitate to use dreams as a contrast class to reality. — Moliere
My earliest memory is of playing with a toy train at Christmas. Neither the train nor the room exist now; I'd have as much difficulty knowing about those things' non-existence outside my present experience as I supposedly have re. knowing about the existence of something outside my present experience. — gurugeorge
both the existence AND the non-existence of things outside my present experience are as problematic as each other - which is to say, not problematic at all. — gurugeorge
you can know by inference. That's what happens with things like the camera test. You might have never seen the piece of paper in question, but be shown a photograph of it that demonstrates its existence. — gurugeorge
you're simply labelling portions of schmerception with tracking labels. ( — gurugeorge
And then you get to Wittgenstein's point - you can't be sure you're using the same tracking label in the same way now as you did 5 minutes ago, in fact you can't even help yourself to any normal notion of time.) — gurugeorge
Hrmm... I think you're coming close to contradicting yourself here. Either our perceptions are infallible, in which case I cannot be mistaken when I see a fire, or they are fallible, and I can be mistaken when I see a fire. — Moliere
There can be no "paper" for schmerception, nor does "photograph" make any sense either. You might be able to single out some portion of the schmerceptual field (my "present kaleidoscope" idea) in some way (perhaps by awareness of shifting boundaries or something like that), but you can't help yourself to the idea that the "paper" portion of the shcmerceptual field has any physical qualities at all — gurugeorge
Therefore the question of whether "it" "exists unperceived" doesn't even make any sense UNTIL you bring in the normal physical backstory — gurugeorge
the normal meaning of "exists unperceived" applies, and the normal tests are sufficient. — gurugeorge
Another way of saying this might be that the more you chase absolute certainty — gurugeorge
about which we're punting some possible nature or character, meaning that we've already left the narrow, presuppositionless realm of schmerception, we're already positing that there's more to the world than just schmerception, just the present kaleidoscope. — gurugeorge
We just throw possible natures, possible essences out there and see what sticks - and by this, I mean that we can devise tests on the hypothesis that the object has the nature we project for it, and if those tests pan out then we can say (with whatever degree of confidence, depending on the rigour of the tests) that the object has that nature. And howsoever rickety and lacking in absolute certainty that process is, well we're stuck with it — gurugeorge
The resonance of your footsteps on the floor, and even the micro-audible vibration of the desk as air moves over it, will differ according to how many pieces of paper are in the desk drawer.
In order to talk about things that may have no effect at all on your sensory organs, you need to at the minimum change the focus to objects outside your past light cone, which means objects in distant outer space. There are difficulties there as well, but they are different difficulties. — andrewk
So the dream-tree does not exist, even when I am seeing it. It is a dream. It doesn't pop in and out of existence. It never existed ever. Yet, upon my perception of it, I certainly believed it to be real.
So our perception of things is not infallible, at least, when it comes to determining if something exists or does not exist.
If you insist on the dream being real, then consider hallucinations, mirages, delusions, and so forth. Our perceptions are surely not infallible when it comes to determining if something is real or not. — Moliere
What you are doing is asking for a justification for your belief, and following each suggestion with "But I am still not convinced".
Your failure to be convinced is not our problem. — Banno
So, what difference does that qualification make? — Janus
I'm asking whether you regard seeing something as perceiving it, but do not regard hearing something as perceiving it. That seems to be implied by your statement (at the top of this post: ↪PossibleAaran) that we do not perceive a motor that we hear, but that we do perceive a table that we see.
If that is your position, do you think it stands up to scrutiny? I wonder what a blind person would think about the suggestion that they don't perceive anything.
If that is not your position then which side would you alter? Would you agree that we do perceive things that we hear, or that we don't perceive things that we see. I can see no other way out of the difficulty, than one of those two options, although I am open to suggestions. — andrewk
The paper in my hand could very well be a dream paper, after all, which doesn't exist. But it can seem very real. The possibility of error -- the probability -- is close enough to the same (I'm not sure how we could even come up with an actual number here, but just by judgment on my part) that there isn't a difference. — Moliere
what kind of certainty would actually make the existence of the perceived any more certain that the existence of objects after they have been perceived? — Moliere
Not sure how you can accept chemistry as scientifically valid without conceding the existence of the atomic world which makes the periodic table what it is. Same with the germ theory of disease, cell biology or neuroscience.
Sure, we have equipment that can make those things perceivable to us, but most of the time atoms, microbes and cells are unperceived. The molecules science says you are made might never have been perceived by anyone. — Marchesk
Or maybe, just maybe, classical physics works so well precisely because its assumptions about macroscopic objects are accurate! — Aaron R
You seem to be haunted by the the prospect that you might be wrong. Get used to it. Such is life! — Aaron R
There is no knowledge of the world apart from perception. — Janus
Even perceiving the piece of paper is insufficient to convince some folk that it exists - they suggest brain vats and daemons and such.
What you are convinced by, and what you believe, are up to you. If you refuse to believe that the cup was still in the kitchen that's entirely up to you. — Banno
Be aware of what your rejection of such obvious stuff tells us about you. You are one step away from Bedlam. Given your opinion on such arguments as this, we should take care with whatever else you say.
You are following a classic philosophical garden path. It leads to much more poor thinking.
So why should we pay you any attention? — Banno
At any one time there will be one or two threads here in which some neophyte explains patiently to we dullards that we can't prove anything. — Banno
How is that any different from saying that when you see a table in front of you, you 'blatantly' assume that the table exists - that you assume that there is a cause of the visual sensation that you have of a certain shape, because the visual sensation and the table are not the same thing? By what argument can you move from the visual sensation to the table?
Taking that approach, one has to conclude that every non-mental thing is unperceived, because we only ever perceive the phenomenon, not the noumenon 'behind' it. — andrewk
Where all humans with human brains and if some of us are Philosophers than aren't we all? — René Descartes
I suppose I'd first ask, what is it about perceiving the paper that makes you believe you know, in the same sense that you're asking about knowing how the unperceived paper exists, that the perceived paper exists?
Clearly if you believe that then there's some kind of method you're already accepting as a path to knowledge of what exists. What constitutes that method? — Moliere
That everything is connected to everything else, so all the examples given here of things that are unperceived, followed by the question 'do they then exist?' are not unperceived. They are perceived, so the question is moot. — andrewk
Well, no. If there is reason to think the speculation wild, there is reason to doubt it.
Thankfully speculation about my coffee not existing was subsequently shown to be false. — Banno
The fact that things are generally where we expect them to be is as reliable a means as you can get. What more reliable kind of means can you imagine might be available? — Janus
but I'm not sure what value you're seeing in pointing out that we could use different words to describe the phenomenon we experience. — Pseudonym
Again, I'd go back to the deeper sorts of arguments I put forth in our previous discussions. If you're accepting that what you're doing when you've got object x in view truly is that thing we normally call "perception" or "observation", whether mediate (camera, videocamara) or immediate (MK-1 eyeball), then plumping for calling what you're doing "perceiving object x" in the immediate case carries with it your implicit acceptance of whole backstory about physical objects in causal concatenation, such that they can't just pop into and out of existence. — gurugeorge
They want to call what's happening in the present moment "experience", "perception", "observation", etc., etc., but they want to retain universal doubt. But if you're universally doubting, then you can't call what's happening right now "perception", "experience", "observation" etc in the first place. But then as soon as you accept those terms, you implicitly accept the physical backstory, so there's no place for universal doubt any more. — gurugeorge
1. They're still around when we do perceive them again.
2. They can undergo change in our absence.
3. They can influence things we do perceive.
4. The perceived world is dependant on the unperceived for being the way it is.
5. We have no reason to suppose that things stop existing when we're not around. — Marchesk
Would that not establish the existence of the unperceived paper, at least every nanosecond (or however many nanoseconds got turned into cents)? — Marchesk
What reason is there to doubt that the coffee I just made is still on the kitchen bench where I left it? I can't see it, and there is no one else out there...
Doubt needs reasons, too. — Banno
That's true, but the salient question, given that objects always seem to remain reliably where we last encountered or put them is whether, in light of that obvious fact, it is more plausible to think that they persist regardless of whether we are perceiving them, or to think that they do not. For sure there can be no absolute proof, no absolute certainty; but why does that matter to you? — Janus
The more general point is that there are many things that we continuously perceive without realising it, by which I mean that we would notice and pay attention if they were to suddenly cease. Other examples are a faint drone of an electric motor, which we only notice when it suddenly stops. Or one of the many instruments in a thick 'wall of sound' musical arrangement of a song, which one doesn't notice until the instrument stops, and thereby subtly alters the texture of the music. — andrewk
But he might not feel anything as well. Experience just ends. — Marchesk
Well Idealism obviously ad hoc because it's inventing a whole different understanding of reality from the ordinary one. That's the less parsimonious bit. — gurugeorge
That would take us back to the line of thought about doubt requiring reason to doubt. Is there a reason to doubt the ordinary story? — gurugeorge