insofar as so-called visible light is electromagnetic radiation, nobody sees light. The so-called visible range of the electromagnetic spectrum is based on the idea that when we see colour on the surface of an object, it is because that surface is reflecting electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength falling within a certain band. [...] Electromagnetic radiation - if it exists as anything other than a theoretical device - exists only in the spaces between us and the things we see. — jkg20
you would still owe me an argument to show that red nevertheless is a human-dependent property. — jkg20
People are bombarded with advertisements to buy this, do that, or respond this way and not another way. — Posty McPostface
...targeting a harmless sheep that psychology is — Posty McPostface
The question is interesting, but is it that sort of question that we (humans) cannot answer, — Pattern-chaser
Except by talking to the deaf-blind...
Ableism at work. — Banno
I mean, when it comes to psychology, nosaneor rather undeluded psychologist want's to assert authority over such matters pertaining the human soul or nature, and that's unfortunate... — Posty McPostface
When I genuinely see a red snooker ball, there is an instantiation of the property red right out there in the world - consitutive of the visible surface of the snooker ball - and I see that instantiation of red. — jkg20
electromagnetic radiation is only derivately coloured — jkg20
According to you, "Only words that are nouns are meaningful". — Samuel Lacrampe
@Pattern-chaser You talk about the "world out there" - how do you think you arrived at that concept other than seeing things "out there", and how would you see things out there if they did not have colour? A colourless world cannot be compared to a blank screen. — jkg20
Ah. <light-bulb emoji> You are trying to make the point that colour is a property of an object out there in the world, and not a consequence of looking at that object with human eyes. With that I must disagree. Red does not exist in the Physical Universe. That which gives rise to red being seen by a human definitely does exist in the real world. I believe that beauty (or red, in this case :wink:) is in the eye of the beholder; you believe it is part of the thing you are looking at. It would've been easier if you'd just said that. :up: :grin: — Pattern-chaser
↪Pattern-chaser
I think jkg20's point is that whilst you might disagree with it, neither you nor Steve Klinko have given an argument that he/she is wrong about this. We might be able to get an argument on the basis of @jkg20's reply to my last question about whether he thinks there is representation going on in the case of veridical vision, but we'll have to wait and see. Just saying that it is wrong and that physics proves it won't cut the mustard because as far as I understand it, @jkg20's position is that modern physics is contaminated by conceptual confusion about what colour is and so proves nothing. — MetaphysicsNow
my point was a little off topic. — Marcus de Brun
I am always a bit sensitive when capitalism appears to be getting off the hook. — Marcus de Brun
Consumption particularly by white westerners is an example of an externally influenced or engineered activity.
Most white western consumption in respect of needs beyond the philosophically valid: food warmth sustenance, education etc... are programmed or inculcated into the herd via the psychology of the herd itself and external manipulations of herd psychology vis media and corporate entities.
The consumptive act is an act of great violence and yet the violence, vis the consequence of consumption is not 'owned' by the consumer. Both the consumption, and the avoidance of ownership of the consequence, have been removed from the reality of the consumer by external forces. The violence that is consequenced by consumption is therefore removed by the magic of the contemporary church of capitalism. — Marcus de Brun
I may email Mr Chomsky again and point him to this discussion. — Gary McKinnon
From here:
The soul was always understood as separable from the body, even following Aristotle's definition, designating it as the form of the body... — Metaphysician Undercover
To here:
As I understand, the soul is not the form of the body. — Metaphysician Undercover
If your understanding is not contradictory, your explanations certainly are. — Galuchat
↪Pattern-chaser
Pattern-chaser said: "Redness is being used to describe the human experience of seeing something that is red."
In this statement lies the crux of the issue: At one and the same time you imply that "something is red" (i.e. the something I might see in the world around me) and on the other that the experience (of seeing something that is red) is red. Presumably you are using "red" in two distinct senses here... — jkg20
1) Having a mental image of a red snooker ball.
2) Having a dream of a red snooker ball.
3) Seeing a red snooker ball.
I am in no way shape or form denying that such phenomena as these exist: people engage in mental imagery, people dream and people see. The specific assumption (and an assumption is all that it is at the moment) I am bringing into the spotlight and challenging is that those three phenomena share a common factor over and above the bare fact that they are about a red snooker ball. You and Pattern-chaser appear to believe that there is such a common factor, but have provided no arguments for agreeing with you. — jkg20
↪Pattern-chaser
Pattern-chaser said: "I've been trying to understand this sub-thread by adopting the (scientific) perspective of an objectivist philosopher."
That is the source of your confusion I think - the scientific perspective you are trying to adopt is incoherent. It requires on the one hand that red actually be a visible surface property of objects in the world that provide the basis for all empirical evidence (how would a world of colourless objects provide us with any visual evidence for any scientific hypothesis?) and on the other that red is only a feature of electromagnetic radiation (and thus something that is not a visible feature of surfaces of objects). — jkg20
The points you make about human beings having a metaphorical use for the word "red" may well be true, but when I make a purely visual observation that a snooker ball is red, I'm not being metaphorical, and I am not talking about the frequency of electromagnetic radiation either. — jkg20
↪Pattern-chaser
Could you give a case example where a person rightfully "knows" something, but that knowledge is either unjustified, untrue, or unbelieved?
Granted, when we say "I know this person", we are here using the word ambiguously. We do not mean here that we believe any truth about this person, but merely that we have met them. Now we are not talking about this type of knowledge, but the type that is about a statement, like "I know x is y". — Samuel Lacrampe
Justified true belief. Does anyone dispute any of these properties as being essential? — Samuel Lacrampe
Yes. None of them is necessarily essential. As ever, it depends on context. For lightweight everyday social chit-chat, none of them need intrude. In a philosophy forum, a little more rigour might be expected. :wink: — Pattern-chaser
We all think in the form that our sensory impressions take. — Harry Hindu
To me, belief is synonymous with understanding. The claim, "I believe in such and such," is just that, a claim or a statement. Usually without proper reference to the truth behind it. — BrianW
Justified true belief. Does anyone dispute any of these properties as being essential? — Samuel Lacrampe
At one and the same time you imply that "something is red" (i.e. the something I might see in the world around me) and on the other that the experience (of seeing something that is red) is red. — jkg20
The issue is what do I, as a human being, see when I see an instance of redness. I certainly do not see electromagnetic radiation. — jkg20
You earlier equated redness with a kind of reflectance property of the surface of objects — jkg20
...redness is right out there in the world, not inside my head. At least, no one has yet provided any argument on this thread to establish otherwise, just a bunch of assumptions. — jkg20
↪Pattern-chaser
, hello.
Because we can prove that all meaningful words have essential properties. Then the fact that we are able to use all words in a meaningful sentence shows that we have some knowledge of their meanings. We just need to uncover the definition by separating the essential properties from the non-essential ones; which is done through the Socratic Method. — Samuel Lacrampe
What both extremes don't seem to realize is that philosophy is a science and that you have to integrate all information from all domains of knowledge in order to have a more objective and consistent worldview. — Harry Hindu
...it is not the experience of seeing colour that the kind of account of vision SteveKlinko sketches threatens to remove from the world, but colour itself. Help yourself to whatever surface feature of objects you want to identify with colour - in your post you identify it as a certain kind of reflectiveness - if I insist that experiencing an instance of the colour red and experiencing an instance of that kind of reflectiveness are one and the same thing, any argument that removes instances of the colour red from the world removes instances of that kind of reflectiveness from the world as well, and the blog post I linked to argues - at least as I understand it - that that would be an incoherent idea. — jkg20
Take visible features like colour and shape out of the world in which objects like brains and retinas and snooker balls exist and it becomes impossible to say anything coherent about that world at all. — jkg20
were you refering to rape when yoy said "life made free of evil" ? — Aleksander Kvam
some believe that not believing in god is evil, and not caring about the vast majority of people is evil. so... — Aleksander Kvam
...life cannot be made free of evil? — Pattern-chaser
child-birth through rape is evil — Aleksander Kvam
The only 100% method of contraception is abstinence. Therefore, any casual sex risks the possibility of unplanned pregnancy. Under current gynocentric laws in America, women have complete authority on what to do with the baby growing inside them. They can even legally kill the baby. Let's assume that abortion is morally equivalent to murder.
If you have casual sex as a man, you are risking pregnancy. If pregnancy happens, there is a chance that the woman will abort (legally murder) your baby or give birth to it and abuse it/raise it poorly. After all, what kind of good mother would have casual sex? Therefore, by having casual sex, you are risking the murder/maltreatment of your children in exchange for pleasure. I argue that risking the murder/maltreatment of your children in exchange for sexual pleasure is immoral. — Ronin3000
elements involved with conscious experiences, are measurable and evident to occur regardless of consciousness — Tyler
I'd argue that correlation does imply cause. It doesn't prove cause, but correlation implies a higher probability that it is also a cause. — Tyler
This fallacy is also known as cum hoc ergo propter hoc, Latin for "with this, therefore because of this," and "false cause." A similar fallacy, that an event that followed another was necessarily a consequence of the first event, is the post hoc ergo propter hoc (Latin for "after this, therefore because of this.") fallacy. — wikipedia
Scientists do not yet have a method for studying the Experience or the Experiencer. — SteveKlinko
> If the experience is caused by neural activity, then the experience and the experiencer are simply neural activity. There may be nothing more to it. — Tyler
Perfection is life made free of evil. — EnPassant
but what is evil? — Aleksander Kvam
I would like to ask if you can imagine a technologically advanced society that is not a disaster. — VagabondSpectre
Has "Western civilization" been a disaster? — Srap Tasmaner