I'm not surprised. — Banno
Sure, it's complex. And you? Do you think that there is indeed a tree with leaves? Is there something about your view that opposes it to direct realism, or perhaps even realism? What? — Banno
It's the tree that either does or does not have leaves, regardless of our perceptions and representations. — Banno
It inevitably heads in the direction of a homunculus argument, which fails. It tries to account for phenomena in terms of the very phenomenon that it is supposed to explain. — NOS4A2
The only way out of this, I think, is to say that “interpreting” and “configuring” reality are acts of perceiving, and abandon the idea that these interpretations and configurations of reality are the objects of perception. But then again, that would imply direct realism, making indirect realism redundant.
If direct realism is saying we are perceiving reality as it is, then indirect realism is perceiving reality exactly as it isn’t. But these qualifiers are essentially nonsensical and unnecessary. Though the problem of the external world is related to the problem of perception, I am speaking strictly of the problem of perception. — NOS4A2
If you’re not using eyes, how are you witness to the end result of this processed and interpreted information? — NOS4A2
Another word for a collection of human organs and processes is a human being. This is the perceiver and can be confirmed to perceive. Any thing less, for instance a subset of organs, cannot be said to perceive. Human perceivers also digest, metabolize, breathe, and grow hair. — NOS4A2
For these reasons it cannot be said that brains perceive. And since our eyes point outwards, it cannot be said we view are perceiving brain phenomena, whether we call them processes, configurations, qualia. — NOS4A2
the brain is viewing a configured tree — NOS4A2
Everything standing in the way of our direct perception disappears. There is nothing between perceiver and perceived. — NOS4A2
Although there may be particular instantiations of the property squund in the world, an instantiation of a property is not a property. — RussellA
What is an event without an perceiver?
— schopenhauer1
Unperceived. — RussellA
There's nothing else apart from space-time that could be a placeholder. — RussellA
But there are more organs and more biology involved in perceiving. — NOS4A2
I agree that in one sense the Direct Realist is looking at a tree in the world , not at the sense data in the mind. They are "looking through" the sense data to the tree on the other side of it, as one looks through a window to the world outside.
However, if someone somehow removed the sense data from the brain of the Direct Realist, they wouldn't be able to see the tree.
In another sense, the Direct Realist is directly looking at something that is at the same time both sense data and a tree. This could be part of the argument against Direct Realism, in that the Direct Realist is perceiving something which is in fact sense data although they think it is a tree, ie, a psychological illusion. — RussellA
Is the brain perceiving the process, then? — NOS4A2
There's only 1 tree of course, but the point is the representation of the tree, the image on the retina, is, well, true (direct realism) or embellished (indirect realism). — Agent Smith
The naive/direct realist believes the perceiver is perceiving the tree exactly as it is,
— schopenhauer1
Nuh. Direct realism is where what we talk about is the tree, not the image of the tree or some other philosophical supposition. — Banno
In philosophy of perception and philosophy of mind, naïve realism (also known as direct realism, perceptual realism, or common sense realism) is the idea that the senses provide us with direct awareness of objects as they really are. — Wiki
Direct realism’ (also known as ‘common sense realism’ or ‘naïve realism’) is the idea that our senses provide us with direct awareness of objects as they really are. The ‘directness’ part of the claim captures well our common sense intuitions of direct perceptual access to the world. However, as the term suggests, ‘direct realism’ also makes the ‘realism’ claim, which is that the existence of the world of objects is not dependent upon it being perceived. — https://philosophynow.org/issues/146/Against_Direct_Realism
Right, that’s how naive realism would say it. How would an indirect realist say it? — NOS4A2
I know how the biology works. The question can be answered in the form X perceives Y. — NOS4A2
I want to know the answer to the question “Who perceives what? For the indirect realist. I want to see if we can examine these objects and their natures. — NOS4A2
I still don’t know why we’d add the qualifier “exactly as it is”. Do you believe we are viewing the trees exactly as they are not? — NOS4A2
Which tree do we perceive? And who is perceiving that tree? — NOS4A2
Yes, we’re not viewing a representation of the tree. We need not include the “thing in itself”, which considers the tree independent of any perception of it. I refer you back to my previous posts. — NOS4A2
Direct realism is simply that we are seeing a tree. — NOS4A2
The perceiver is required in order to formulate any theory of perception. If I leave it out there is no perception. I only which to understand from indirect realism the point at which the perceiver ends and the perceived begins, and whether something lies between them. — NOS4A2
Why would I leave ourselves out of the picture? — NOS4A2
I agree with you. Can we even talk about this subject without being hopelessly enmeshed in strictures of experience and our conceptual schemas?
Even language is a kind of sense that does not make actual contact with the things it is describing. Language's connection to reality seems as tenuous as that of visual perception. — Tom Storm
I avoid strong metaphysical commitments by claiming a form of pragmatism. I don't need to know what or why just how. No matter what we belief about the nature of reality and being, as soon as we walk out the door we behave as naïve realists. At some level the games we can play with conceptual framing and language don't matter all that much. — Tom Storm
It means that anyone can observe the same properties if they were so inclined. These things would be the objects and systems we measure. Properties describe these things. — NOS4A2
What is a universe without any point of view? People insert themselves into the picture.. Often when we think of "a universe devoid of a point of view" we think of empty space, or images of planets with nothing else, or something like that. But that's not it either. "Events happening" with no epistemological element, is something we cannot compute. — schopenhauer1
I suspect an “objective property” is one that is public, available for anyone to measure. With this one needn’t eliminate an observer. — NOS4A2
There's suffering but there's also a lot of joy. A lot of people consider the suffering to be worth it due to the joy. — Xanatos
Frankly, anti-natalism for high-IQ people has struck me as being rather stupid since this would only contribute to dysgenics for future generations. If future generations will, on average, become duller, than this would be worse for humanity as a whole. Even the people who want to curb their fertility for the sake of the planet are being stupid IMHO because this would simply mean that there would be fewer people in future generations who will intensely care about this topic because such people will simply be weeding themselves and their own political views out of the future gene pool. — Xanatos
I hope you weren't in the middle of something important. I'd hate to be a nuisance monsieur! — Agent Smith
Our non-grandchildren will not sing of our brave exploits! :lol: — Agent Smith
