Although there are no immediate visual or audible cues as to gravity's disappearance, the occupants will nevertheless be instantly filled with alarm, as they are suddenly struck by that stomach-in-throat, I just jumped off the diving platform, feeling. They will perceive the disappearance viscerally. — andrewk
But this feeling that the diver has is one which he has as a result of falling. The idea of falling obviously assumes that there is somewhere to fall to, and that would assume that there is somewhere that exists while unperceived by the train passengers.
IOW, you ditch inference, and with it, explanations of any sort that aren't strictly deductive. You just have one experience following another for no rhyme or reason. — Marchesk
Indeed. Is there something wrong with that theory. What is it?
Then a partition is put between you and the fire that blocks your from seeing, hearing or smelling the fire. It ceases to exist as a perception. Furthermore, there is a timer that will let you out before your run out of air, but only if the fire on the other side of the partition is no longer consuming air.
What happens? Do you survive or does your air run out? How would Stace answer that? — Marchesk
Presumably he would say: First there is me and the experience of the room and the fire. Then there is just me and the experience of the room. The fire no longer exists since it is no longer perceived. After some time I cease having experiences and die. If I were told that there is this timer in the room which will let me free only if the fire doesn't exist, and I observe until the point where it is pretty clear that the timer is not going to let me out,
perhaps I could infer that the fire still exists while unperceived. But I am not sure of the point of this thought experiment, because it is so contrived. If the experiment had been performed in reality, which it hasn't, that might prove the existence of the fire in those contrived circumstances, but the existence of regular objects in regular circumstances would remain unproven.
And really, why would the question of needing air come up at all? Why would you die of needing something (oxygen) you can't perceive? — Marchesk
I can feel the oxygen as I inhale it, can I not? If you say "no. You cannot tell from inhaling that what you inhale is oxygen molecules", then fair enough, but the existence of the molecules can be securely inferred from the perceptible properties of air.
You are being misled by your slideshow treatment of the world. It would indeed be strange if, when the paper ceased to exist, there were just this weird black space, as though the universe is literally a canvas and the piece of paper was literally rubbed out leaving a gap in the line work. But that wouldn't be what the Idealist imagines to happen. When he says that the paper ceases to exist when no one perceives it, what he imagines to happen is that the space where the paper was is replaced with empty space - not some strange erased nothingness, just ordinary empty space. Except, this wouldn't be quite right, since the Idealist holds that
nothing exists when unperceived, and so he would have to maintain that the empty space inside the drawer doesn't exist either. But again, he need not be committed to this strange picture of the inside of the drawer being literally erased. He can maintain that the limits of existence are the limits of perception. Where perception stops, there is nothing. No empty space. No strange erased spaces with borders. Nothing.
I think a whole generation of philosophers, and an increasing number of those considering themselves scientists, would question in what way verifiable testing produces truths that are categorically more rigorous from truths detemined through other discourses, such as philosophical. — Joshs
Great point.
So I see the paper, right? But it's not that simple. What if I glance in the direction of the paper but don't process it as a piece of paper. We do that all the time. Our minds are preoccupied with other thoughts and we look right through something, not identifying it conceptually as 'this object'. And the act of identifying the paper as a thing is a protracted process. At first our visual system will process edges and then move on to a more encompassing recognition of the object. And our intentions and presuppositions enter into the perception in complex ways. — Joshs
Now, if instead of a human perceiving thepaper, we take a snake, the perceptual mapping of the works will look quite different, since perception is about interacting with an environment adaptively in relation to one's needs, rather than representing, mirroring or copying something. The idea of object would be, to say the least , wry different for a snake, if in fact a sense of persisting thing was necessary at all for it.
We could demonstrate how different the perceptual mapping of a world would be if we used a human infant, also, one who had not yet established object permanency, and for whom a piece of paper would likely not exist as a coherent object yet. — Joshs
It should be stressed that these two facts are about perception construed very differently. Animals perceive the world differently to humans in the sense that what they literally see - what is given to their conscious awareness - is different because they have different sense organs. Humans don't see the world differently in that sense. What humans literally see is for the most part the same or incredibly similar. What is different is their interpretation of what they see, in accord with their beliefs desires and needs. It is true that infants don't interpret what they see as a 'piece of paper' which exists permanently. But it isn't true that the infants don't literally see the paper. If they didn't see it, there would be nothing for them to later interpret when they pick up the relevant concepts. Its also true that usually I don't pay attention to every object which is part of my visual field. There is a television in the background of my visual field right now which has gone unnoticed by me for about half an hour. But what is all of this supposed to show?
what exactly would be appearing and disappearing in our world as our attentive processing shifted from moment to moment would not only be relative person to person, or creature to creature, or developmental stage to developmental stage, but also moment to moment. — Joshs
This seems to me a fallacious inference. As I said, it is true that people interpret the world differently, but it doesn't follow from this that what exists is person relative. This mistake is perhaps masked by your conflation between the given and interpretation of the given. If there really were nothing given at all, it would seem to follow that humans could only know about their own interpretations of the world, and never about an independent world. And from that one might conclude, ala Richard Rorty, that the idea of 'the word' independent of interpretation is a useless fiction. But as I pointed out, this would rest on confusing the given and the interpretation of the given.
Some difficulties are raised by the fact that different things are given for different creatures. That might put pressure on the idea that humans can know what the world is like in itself, and not just as it is for humans. But this is the point of a scientific account of things. In a scientific account, one is supposed to move beyond the features of a thing which are merely relative to human modes of perception, and seek a more objective characterization of the thing which explains why it appears a certain way to humans. Whether this really works seems to fall outside of the scope of what I wanted to discuss in the thread.
I suppose you would object to the idea of the given on the grounds that it is an 'impoverished abstraction':
Classical logic would say these are peripheral and irrelevant issues to defining the paper as physical entity, but classical logic is content tomsubstitute an impoverished abstraction for the more fundamental interactively determined meanings of how we interact with a world. — Joshs
As I see it, the idea of the given is that it is
supposed to be an abstraction. In framing the notion of the given, we are trying to characterize perceptual experience solely by reference to the element which is common across all of us. We abstract away all of the person relative elements and call them the 'interpretation of' the given. What we are left with is the common element of experience, which is to serve as a reliable guide to the nature of the objective world.
Thanks for this, it got me thinking in an interesting direction.
I agree with you. I am only suggesting that the word 'know' needs further explication before the question is well-defined enough for a rigorous answer. Otherwise, the question admits of too many different interpretations. I think Kant failed to see this, but as did many before and after him.
"How can I alone, out of my own resources, know that things exist unperceived?" - then there is no answer, and I am led inevitably to solipsism. — gurugeorge
There is no reliable way for me to know that things exist unperceived at all? But I thought you said:
the hypothesis that the unperceived object exists, is a reasonable explanation for present experience's being the way it is. — gurugeorge
This argument sounds like an argument I could make using my own resources, doesn't it? And what about what other people tell me? Why can't what other people tell me count as part of my resources?
I suppose you might think that this would require that I first know, out of my own resources, that other people exist. That would be right, but couldn't I know this out of my own resources? If I couldn't, what sense does it make for me to enjoy the company of anyone else, given that it is mere guess work whether or not there is anyone else? This last paragraph is only speculation on what you might be thinking. Forgive me if I have gone off on the wrong tracks.
, you employ the same tactic sometimes employed by Marchesk. That is, to answer my question by asking other questions in the hope that my original question then sounds ridiculous. But your raising these questions does not answer my original question, so far as I can tell. It doesn't follow from the facts that (a) the paper is there when I look at T1 and (b) it is there when I look at T3, that it was there when I wasn't looking at T2.
Thanks again for the replies,
PA