Austin: Sense and Sensibilia I'm not sure where this leaves us. — Banno
As I read him, James isn’t saying that the “simples” -- of whatever level of simplicity -- are objects of perception at all. Certainly it’s a question for physiologists to decide at what point something is in fact perceivable, but James (and Flanagan, who has updated a lot of James in his own accounts of consciousness) is concerned with something a bit different. His point is that a constitutive or foundational or quiddity-ish description of object X is unlikely to coincide with what we can perceive. Mind you, this is using “perceive” in the way I suggested, as a term for phenomenal experience. There are certainly ways you could use it that would allow for “perceiving” atoms, I guess, but that’s hardly common. What J & F & I find interesting here is the disconnect between “what is X” understood as an ontological question, and “what is X” understood as a question about what I’m perceiving. Just for funsies, I ran this by a physicist friend of mine. He didn’t understand how there could even be a debate here. “The fundamental entities of existence don't look anything like what we perceive with our senses,” was the gist of his reaction. I think that’s what James meant.
As for the question about Jupiter: We don’t do either of the things you’re asking about, it seems to me. We can’t build up
Jupiter as such, unless we know its name. What we can build up is a description of what we see, and perhaps get to “an object with characteristics A, B, C...” but a name isn’t perceivable. Upon being told that our object is called Jupiter, we can add that info to our knowledge, and refer to it by name, but no one thinks we can see Jupiter in the same way we see a color. Otherwise, we would have known the name from the beginning. “Jupiter” isn’t a raw feel, an element of (sorry) sense data. The analysis is the same working in the other direction, from Jupiter to the bands and patches.
Not to be repetitive, but this all seems to hinge on disambiguation of what we mean when we say things like “I see Jupiter.” Are we naming a sensible object, or the
using the name of a sensible object? Funnily enough, in a way that Austin might well appreciate, the “common man” has no trouble making this distinction whenever it’s needed; we philosophers seem to get in a muddle about it and insist that there’s only one right way to speak.