Why should we expect there to be one universal account of consciousness, dreaming, cogitation and such? — Banno
Language is for expressing, describing and communicating thoughts and the contents of perception. — Corvus
The infinite regress is only avoided by stopping, which renders the capacity as still not understood, because we do not get to the bottom of it — Metaphysician Undercover
So the math does not provide us with any higher degree of certainty about the world than other language forms, because it is applied according to principles stated in other forms of language anyway. — Metaphysician Undercover
Plato may have presented math as if it was supposed to be the standard, but then exposed problems with that presupposition, and in the Parmenides, he demonstrates problems with math's basic foundational concept, "one", or "unity". — Metaphysician Undercover
While Malcolm gives a little here, there is not much left over to compare whether a conscious experience of a dream is "qualitatively" similar or different to a conscious experience of being awake. — Richard B
The quotation from Austin is:- "I may have the experience (dubbed 'delusive' presumably) of dreaming that I am being presented to the Pope. Could it be seriously suggested that having this dream is 'qualitatively indistinguishable' from actually being presented to the Pope? Quite obviously not. After all, we have the phrase 'a dream-like quality'; some waking experiences are said to have this dream-like quality, and some artists and writers occasionally try to impart it, usually with scant success, to their works." pp. 48, 49.I’m not sure where Austin put forward “this idea” of what we do in dreams. — Antony Nickles
I think you could say the same thing about Austin. His arguments have been largely ignored because the philosophical community continues to talk about qualia, what-it's-like-ness experiences, or the ontological subjective. — Richard B
My main point in this post is to show how two linguistic philosophers supposedly analyzing the same ordinary language we all use, seemingly coming up with some fundamentally different conclusions. — Richard B
Oh you said you don't get mental images. — Corvus
I'm afraid I have a mild form of aphantasia. You can speak for yourself, but not for me. — Ludwig V
Perception will not bear the epistemological weight philosophers put on its shoulders. it needs help. — Banno
It's in line with Wittgenstein, of course:
To repeat: don’t think, but look!
— PI, §66 — Banno
I was saying that if delusions, illusions are regarded as a type of perception, then why shouldn't seeing mental images in memories, imaginations, thinking and intuitions be thought of as a type of perception too. It was a suggestion, not a claim. — Corvus
The issue is that the capacity to see, which is temporally posterior to learning how to see, is necessarily prior in time, to the physical act of seeing. Therefore the capacity to see cannot be reduced to the capacity to learn how to see, nor can it be reduced to the physical activity of seeing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I understand folk like to say Malcolm is denying that we have experiences such as dreams, but I think we one needs to understand he is studying how we understand the concept of "dreaming" and what we can and cannot say about such a concept. — Richard B
I think you could say the same thing about Austin. His arguments have been largely ignored because the philosophical community continues to talk about qualia, what-it's-like-ness experiences, or the ontological subjective. — Richard B
Austin seems to be saying that we somehow know the dream experience is "qualitatively" different than the waking experience, because as he says "How otherwise should we know how to use and contrast the words. — Richard B
In "Dreaming" Malcolm does not ignore scientific considerations regarding dreams. He says the following: — Richard B
Austin goes on to criticise the notion that there are preferred conditions for observations in which we can see the "real" qualities of some object. Again, by way of a series of examples he shows that it is not possible to make this approach coherent. — Banno
But why don't they include mental images we see during our remembering, imagining, thinking, and intuiting? That was my question. — Corvus
I was saying that if delusions, illusions are regarded as a type of perception, then why shouldn't seeing mental images in memories, imaginations, thinking and intuitions be thought of as a type of perception too. It was a suggestion, not a claim. — Corvus
Taking your question at face value: speaking for myself, I view it as an ability that can be used or not used. As one additional tool in the toolbox of cognition. It in no way interferes with any day-to-day cognitive process. — javra
You visualise the cup in your mind, and are seeing mental images of the cup. — Corvus
. There, I do consider the case of an actual image. My discussion of hallucinations deals with one form of mental images. I didn't consider this case. I'm reluctant to deny that people see something when they see mental images, because it seems that some people find them useful in, for example, problem-solving. However, in line with the empirical evidence, I do deny that people always see an actual image when they think about, remember, or imagine a cup.Let me try to come at it this way. — Ludwig V
The ability to perform that special activity is what defines "the perceiver" — Metaphysician Undercover
Wittgenstein, who would define having the ability to 'follow a rule' as someone who has been observed to have followed a specified rule, rather than as someone who has the capacity to follow that rule. — Metaphysician Undercover
Wittgenstein is faced with the question of what type of capacity exists prior to this. — Metaphysician Undercover
From this perspective, the capacity to perceive, what we are calling "the perceiver", must necessarily preexist the act which is implied here by the name, as the act of perception. — Metaphysician Undercover
Instead, we must accept the obvious, much more highly, and truly intuitive principle, that the capacity to perceive, which defines "the perceiver" must be prior in time to any act of perception. — Metaphysician Undercover
He could just have said that perceptions can lack certainty in certain cases. — Corvus
I feel that perception doesn't end there, but it activates the other mental activities — Corvus
For Ayers, the hallmark of indirect realism is divergence between the world as experienced by a human, and the world as it is. — frank
For Austin, if human experience lines up correctly with what one would expect from a certain POV, — frank
I was alluding to something along the lines of the extended mind idea. — Apustimelogist
Secondly, words are not (except in their own little corner) facts or things: we need therefore to prise them off the world, to hold them apart from and against it, so that we can realize their inadequacies and arbitrariness, and can re-look at the world without blinkers. — (Austin, J. L. “A Plea for Excuses: The Presidential Address”, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, 1957: 181–182
What is offered by Austin is not a definition, but a method to test proposed uses. What we have is an antidote to the philosopher's tendency to push words beyond their applicability. — Banno
So in outline, Ayer was looking for certainty, and in the process misused and muddled the terms and concepts he was working with. Austin's approach, along with others involved in the "linguistic turn", is to look for clarity over certainty. — Banno
There could be cases of illusion, hallucination, delusion, and confronting with the bogus objects which look like certain objects, but found out to be bogus, lookalikes, mistaken identities etc. Hence the contents of perception require further judgements of its "authenticity" to have assurance as legitimate knowledge. — Corvus
Cheers. I hope I made a good effort after all. — javi2541997
Keeping on the track, Austin says that 'real' 'nor does it have a large number of different meanings-it is not ambiguous. ' I just don't understand why he says this. — javi2541997
Austin claims that 'real' is more understandable among the people than 'proper' 'genuine', 'true' 'authentic', etc. — javi2541997
I don’t think it can be established that a perceiver is both perceiver and perceived. — NOS4A2
But if the medium, perceiver, is made to be the subject of our inquiry, then the thing perceived and the perception are incidental to the inquiry, and the silliness of this thread is avoided. — Metaphysician Undercover
The nervous system is not a medium, though, because it is a part of that which senses—the perceiver—not that which the perceiver senses. I guess my next question is: where does the perceiver begin and end? I doubt appealing to biology can furnish an answer in favor of the indirectness of perception. — NOS4A2
The problem I see is that there is no clear way of determining which philosophical theory is more right. — Janus
Anything that has no intellectual appeal to virtually anyone will not "go" to be sure. — Janus
There is, as you point out, also REM and other evidence that shows a great deal of activity during sleep. It looks as if something is happening. That seems to be why Malcolm's ideas are discounted. — Banno
Why not say they are dreaming? — Banno
The central critique aimed at Malcolm's account is, as I understand it, that he insists that dreams occur (at least in their quintessential form) when one is soundly asleep, a definition not accepted by others, especially dream researchers. — Banno
Our fears and desires are isolating us as the only way to maintain something certain (by pulling back from the world); but we don’t need everything to meet the criteria of certainty. — Antony Nickles
Is anyone going to do a reading of VII? Or are we not done with VI. — Antony Nickles
I'm afraid it is me that is the terrible writer. I should not have allowed myself to use that term, though I meant by it no more than seeing/hearing/....He is not talking about perception, he is discussing indirect and direct (here as they relate to seeing, reflecting, etc.); he accepts none of that. I must be a terrible writer. — Antony Nickles
Certainly. I should have put the point in a different way to make that plain.The point is that there is not one kind of evidence (direct or not; real or not). — Antony Nickles
There's another tricky word. I'm only gesturing at the point that what's in question is not "ordinary", contingent falsity, but something more radical, in that Ayer uses "direct" and "indirect" in an incoherent way.I haven’t seen anything that would make me think Austin would concede that it was not false. — Antony Nickles
I'm glad you found a way of understanding what I was trying to say.Ludwig V says that Austin might not have had any idea on Perception. I — Corvus
is indeed a mouthful. I would still resist calling that a theory and I would have included the proviso "if you accept his use (I don't say definition) of "direct" and "indirect"." Part of the issue is whether Ayer's use of those terms is coherent."sometimes direct, sometimes indirect, and that neither is always the case"-ism — Corvus
Your statement is based on a fallacy of false dichotomy. Surely there are more perceptual theories than just the two. — Corvus
After a little contemplation, I remember where I got this sense that something is just not right with this passage. From another linguistic philosopher, Norman Malcolm, in is book Dreaming, Chapter 18 "Do I know I am Awake", he says the following: — Richard B
Does this show that Austin drifted from the pure faith of linguistic philosophy? Or, that he may have other philosophical presuppositions hidden in his closet? — Richard B
Ayer resigns himself to only be able to be sure of facts about sense-data (to thus be certain by one, fixed standard because only one type of object, without the need of any talk of context). — Antony Nickles
Just want to clear this up (if I can). — Antony Nickles
To attempt to clear up the direct/indirect issue, — Antony Nickles
You still have not answered whether Austin was a direct realist or not. — Corvus
Of course, there needs to be evidence under the scrutiny of judgment. I mean, it’s not like we can just make up anything. — Antony Nickles
I think it's more a matter of philosophers finding new and novel ways to imagine things; the "problem" only arises when the demand that there be just one "correct" way of viewing things is made. — Janus
My point was that, in thinking about perception in different ways, using different criteria for what would count as 'direct' and 'indirect', perception can be considered to be either direct or indirect. So my question is, given there is no fact of the matter regarding which is the case. what is the problem? — Janus
Phenomenologically speaking our perceptions certainly seem immediate. On the other hand. scientific analysis show perceptions to be highly mediated processes. Which is right? Well, they both are in their own ways. — Janus
Direct and indirect are just words i.e. adjectives and adverbs describing how perception worked. One can say, I can see it directly, indirectly, clearly, dimly, sharply, indubitably, lucidly, positively, distinctly, manifestly, conspicuously, translucently, unmistakably, evidently, or precisely, .... etc etc. — Corvus
Well, yes. But then, they could equally well agree to meet at the church. Always subject to the proviso there is a the context of a mutual understanding of where to meet. But in the context of a church-barn or barn-church, that understanding is harder to presuppose.Folk might quite successfully agree to "meet at the barn". — Banno
I would like to think so. Though the Stanford Encyclopedia cites Alvin Goldman as the source, in 1976. But he might easily have read Austin as well.Doubtless Gettier had read Austin. — Banno
Phenomenologically speaking our perceptions certainly seem immediate. On the other hand. scientific analysis show perceptions to be highly mediated processes. Which is right? Well, they both are in their own ways. — Janus
Here it is the fear of a skeptical moral world transferred to our best case scenario, a physical object. — Antony Nickles
I think it's more a matter of philosophers finding new and novel ways to imagine things; the "problem" only arises when the demand that there be just one "correct" way of viewing things is made. — Janus
So there's no single view of him that represents a consensus. — frank
There are phenomenal experiences – let’s call them perceptions – and these same experiences can refer to, or be of, objects in the world which have names and, often, are constituted in interesting ways by smaller, more fundamental components. — J
All perception is indirect via sense data and sense-organ which carries the sensed information into the brain via sense organs. — Corvus
Direct and indirect are not some essential properties of existence or entities as some folks seem to think. — Corvus
We could easily have used "mediated" or "medium-less" instead of direct or indirect. — Corvus
Plane from London to Sydney is a direct flight, if it flies without stopping anywhere during flight, takes off from London and lands in Sydney then it is a direct flight. If it stops in some other airports such as Dubai or Singapore, then it would be an indirect flight. — Corvus
I think Corvus was just pointing out that science shows that perception involves representation and interpretation. It's just weird to insist that that's direct (as someone in the thread was doing). — frank
That's right. Austin was a classicist. He was drawn into philosophy by puzzlement at the things philosophers said. He brought his method over from Classics. — Banno
We should try to avoid the interminable discussions that so often proceed from such differences. I take it that we agree there is a church, and that it looks like a barn, and that "I see a church" is OK, and so is "I see a barn", but that their conjunction needs some additional information - the fact of the camouflage - to avoid contradiction. — Banno
I get that. But we are perceiving light, not electrical signals. We are our eyes, the signals, the brain, etc. We cannot be both perceivers and mediums. — NOS4A2
So I wonder to what extent we should take into account this topic from a Philosophy of Language perspective, and not just metaphysics. — javi2541997
I wanted to point out that part of the confusion here is that we (and most everyone in philosophy in general) do not take what Austin is doing as revolutionary and radical as it is. He is not offering another theory to explain “perceiving” or something to replace it. He is claiming that the problem that everyone is arguing about how to solve is made up; — Antony Nickles
Ayer wants us to take "something looks bent" and conclude that, therefore, something is bent; it's only by our being duped in this way that we will again be convinced of the existence of sense data. — Banno
Having gotten through Lecture IV: this is an example of where Austin takes a deep-dive into the differences between ordinary "uses" of words that philosophy takes as terms for a special purpose, but I think Austin somethings buries the point of all this. — Antony Nickles
the way things look is, in general, just as much a fact about the world, just as open to public confirmation or challenge, as the way things are. p 43 — Antony Nickles
Here we must consider first that it is not so much neither internal nor external but both that we are stuck with. — javi2541997
all perceptions are somehow indirect from the minimal perspective that for any human perception, — Corvus
I am still trying to understand the direct realist's account on perception. In what aspect perception is to be understood as direct and real? — Corvus
Linguistic Idealism — RussellA
however people will rebut that it is the whole body and not just the brain so it’s direct in that this is how the human brain body processes the world, — schopenhauer1
Linguistic Idealism may be described as the position that puts the mind at the centre of reality and language at the centre of the mind, and language does not represent the physical world as is often claimed but is the world itself. — RussellA
like an entire lecture on the word “real”. — NOS4A2
But we are not asking who or what is responsible for perception, but how perception works. — Corvus
For my part my intent is to continue in the way I have been, reading a lecture or two ahead and then going back to re-read in more detail to make notes mostly for myself. Lecture IV will probably be very brief, then a bit more detail, or less, as we move into the later lectures, if I loose interest. If you want to move at a faster pace, go ahead, but I've found in the past that this leads to folk getting lost and needing to go over arguments again. — Banno
Austin is specifically tearing down philosophy's framing of the issue as both direct or indirect. — Antony Nickles
. The idea that we can, so to speak "peel off" the layers of interpretation to arrive at a purified, simple sensation seems to me a wild goose chase. That peeling off process is itself a process and the result will be another concept of the sensation which will be, paradoxically, itself a concept. There is no "before". (I wish I could construct the Austinian argument for this.)the unabstracted perception, the unconceptualized sensation specific to one setting and one time. — J
Yes - in the context of our mistakes. The argument from illusion, rightly seen, is not as persuasive as the more difficult cases. The more difficult problem is that, for example, Macbeth is behaving as if he sees a dagger, and not acting (pretending), so he believes that he sees a dagger. There's no (philosophical) problem until we remember that perceiving is always perceiving something. So we invent something to plug the apparent logical gap and create something that gives us philosophical certainty, and a morass of problems to go with it. That's my diagnosis of the conjuring trick, anyway.It’s just a question of what it is we are perceiving. — NOS4A2
If the law of identity holds, I cannot consider “the final place where the perceptual judgement took place” as perceived, because the brain is a component of the perceiver. Does X perceive Y, or does X perceive X? At any rate, neither precludes any intermediary. — NOS4A2
I think perspective - subject and object - is based on two main categories: — javi2541997
what we imagine direct perception would be the perfect case of. So if we set aside the problem of direct or indirect, — Antony Nickles
The danger here is the presumption that what we perceive is all of one sort, in such a way that we can apply the label "sense data" in all cases. Austin is showing that this is not a good idea. — Banno
Instead it starts pretty well where we are, here and now. And it proceeds by looking with great care at the philosopher's main tools, their words. — Banno
and there's a mention of Gellner's book here:-Some mirth has been found in Austin's use of "the ordinary man" - as if such as he would have any idea.. — Banno
Ernest Gellner. In his book, Word and Things, — Richard B
In perception, there is far more going on than just identifying an object as an object i.e. reasoning, intuition, judgement and intentionality can get all involved, and for that they have to be sense data, — Corvus
Kripke allows that mathematicians can adequately specify the rules of addition. That's not being called into question. — frank
There are rules for which the process that brings them into effect is quite clear. They are what we call laws, but there are other varieties. They are imperatives, not really different from the order given by the general. Other rules, like mathematical rules about how to calculate are different. There are proofs of such rules. What makes them effective? Which is to say, what justifies them? That's where the sceptical pressure (which W also applied) and his appeal to practices comes in. But that involves saying that the rule doesn't really of itself produce facts; human beings have to carry out the calculations (or psersuad machines to do it for them. Those results are facts, i.e. have the authority of facts? Only the calculation, which can't produce a wrong result. That means that if a result does not fit in to our wider lives in the way it is expected to, we look for the fault in the calculation and the calculator, not the rule.The rule is in effect, and in some sense then it produces facts — Moliere
If you mean a fact that justifies the rule and/or justifies how the rule is applied. I sometimes think that the quickest way to state the problem is to point out that the rule cannot be a fact, because the rule has imperative force and no fact can do that - a version of the fact/value distinction. For the same reason, no fact can, of itself, justify the rule.The skeptic has to be pointing out that we're inclined to believe there's a fact where there is none in order for the skeptic to have a point at all. — Moliere
logical nihilism or pluralism. — Apustimelogist
The side effect of neat clean concepts is they lose all the fuzzy non-linearity which makes them exceptionally good at being used in real life. — Apustimelogist
because here we have truths that we arrive at because of the conditions of assertability — Moliere
neurons that are physical enslaved — Apustimelogist
I hope so. It's the only way that we get reliable information - and, in great part, we do.impelling the perceptions forced upon us — Apustimelogist
I'm sure there's a lot of quick and dirty solutions and heuristic dodges involved. Anything remotely like formal logic would be too slow to be useful.making it look like we are acting in these kinds of mysterious ways that seem somewhat messy and underdetermined by our concepts and so can only be described as "games, practises, forms of life". — Apustimelogist
I was only talking about relying on a memorized table, instead of doing the basic calculations. It's an example of a quick and dirty solution.I dunno; I think looking at this way, as I seem to understand what you have said, plays down everything else that Wittgenstein seems to be getting at in philosophical investigations. — Apustimelogist
One result is that I now know how to defuse Goodman's "grue". — Ludwig V
This point is made elsewhere. The complication is that the private language argument does rely on some of the things he says about rule-following, particularly the importance of understanding what does and does not conform to the rules about ostensive definition. But numbers are not sensations, so the cases are not exactly the same.Another is that it seems that Kripke has made the private language argument superfluous. I need to think about that. — Ludwig V
W likes lots of examples. In one way, Kripke's case is just another one, although W does mention the point at PI 201 "This was our paradox: no course of action could be determined by a rule, because every course of action can be brought into accord with the rule. The answer was: if every course of action can be brought into accord with the rule, then it can also be brought into conflict with it. And so there would be neither accord nor conflict here." I had forgotten this quotation. In time, I could no doubt find what he was referring back to. It gives a short answer to both Goodman and Kripke.A third - minimal - result is that Kripke has added to the stock of examples that pose Wittgenstein's problem. — Ludwig V
Isn't that an accurate reflection of what we've been saying about practices?The fourth is that I notice that we have all appealed to the wider context, both of mathematics and of practical life to resolve it. Kripke's case is effective only if we adopt his very narrow view, — Ludwig V
