If there is no direct perception for humans, then that’s the case. We need not a comparator. — AmadeusD
(the dispute consists in) whether the fact that real world objects [that] initiate the process of perception constitutes a “directness” required for DR to make any sense. But it doesn’t viz. the fact that 'perception' the process, is initiated by an external, real-world object does not negate the several way-points that prevent our 'perceptions' i.e perceptual experiences being of the real-world object. — AmadeusD
There is no way to pretend that the perceptual experience is 'direct' in any sense other that it is an immediate apprehension of representations. — AmadeusD
If that's what a DR means, I think that would undercut the entire debate and reduce it to literally a problem of stubborn people (may be) misusing words. — AmadeusD
Where did I say that our perceptions are of representations?
— Luke
My position is that our perceptual experience typically represents real world objects. That is, our perceptual experience is typically of real world objects; we typically perceive real world objects. The perceptual experience is the representation.
— Luke
^^ this seems to indicate, if one cuts through the grammar, to indicate from the bolded that position.. Unless there's some smuggling of the object into the mind going on in the intervening lines? — AmadeusD
Direct experience: Awareness of a perceptual experience.
Indirect experience: Awareness of an object (via perceptual experience) — hypericin
Perceptual experience entails awareness of the perceptual experience. — hypericin
"Awareness" is my replacement for "see" or "perceive". We don't "see perceptual experience", we don't "perceive perceptual experience", we are "aware of perceptual experience", — hypericin
Perceptual experience entails awareness of the perceptual experience. — hypericin
...there is no such requirement to be aware of the perceptual experience itself. — hypericin
P1: We are aware of perceptual experiences.
P2: Perceptual experiences are representations of mind-independent reality.
P3: We are aware of representations of mind independent reality. (From P1, P2)
P4: If one is aware of a representation, one has indirect awareness what it represents.
C: We are indirectly aware of mind-independent reality. (From P3, P4).
We agree on P2. So do you challenge P1, P4, or both? — hypericin
No one here is doubting that the photograph is of real world objects. But does that mean the photograph gives you direct experience of the real world objects? — hypericin
It is incoherent to have a perceptual representation without an awareness of the perceptual representation.
Therefore, perceptual experience is representation coupled with an awareness of the representation.
Therefore, perceptual experience is (in part) awareness of the representation.
Therefore, perceptual experience is (in part) awareness. — hypericin
Perceptual experience is awareness. — hypericin
perceptual experience is (in part) awareness. — hypericin
No, none of the links mention the possibility, "representation of a representation". — hypericin
"Merely" is not a value judgement. It is a contrast with the perceptual process, which itself may be directly of an object. — hypericin
Perceptual experience is awareness. "What is the awareness of?", is the question. A representation, or the world? None of these links mention the possibility, "a representation of a representation". — hypericin
"What is the awareness of?", is the question. A representation, or the world? — hypericin
the only part of this process the subject is directly aware of is the perceptual experience itself. — hypericin
But perception is a process, what we are actually, directly aware of, the perceptual experience, merely represents the object. — hypericin
It’s possible my reply to you didn’t land because this was directly addressed, in relation to at least one other commenter. I invite you to reread what I’ve said there :) — AmadeusD
One of the deeeper (and imo dumber) disputes has been whether the new inclusion of real world objects at the initiation of the process of perception constitutes a “directness” requires for DR to make any sense. But it doesn’t. — AmadeusD
Then I couldn’t know what to say. This directly contradicts your earlier assertion that our perceptions are if representations. — AmadeusD
You are conflating perception and perceptual experience. A "perceptual experience" is not a perception when you are hallucinating, dreaming, etc. There is nothing you are perceiving, you are only experiencing. I call a "perception" the overall process that connects real world objects with the perceiving self, and "perceptual experience" what the self actually subjectively experiences. — hypericin
Is this a disagreement on terminology, or substance? If terminology, what other word could fill the role I am giving "perception"? — hypericin
The dispute is over whether perceptions allow direct or indirect awareness of real world objects. — hypericin
But mostly, I believe that the dispute between direct realists and indirect realists concerns whether or not we have direct perceptions/perceptual experiences of real world objects
— Luke
I also believe that a real world object is not part of a perception, and that only a representation of a real world object is part of a perception. I don't have physical (real world) objects in my mind; only representations of them.
— Luke
It would have been good if either this, or your other conception of the conflict, were actually agree upon in the first pages of this thread. Read together, these two passages end the dispute. I have a feeling even Banno would be shown to be prevaricating on this account of the terms. — AmadeusD
If DR amounted merely to a claim of 'direct perception of representations' it would be a useless term - a fig leaf. — AmadeusD
Here is a diagram of my conception of perception. Which parts do you disagree with? — hypericin
Object perception in smell, sight, hearing are indirectly mediated by molecules, light, and sound waves respectively. — hypericin
But to be clear, this is not the indirection we are discussing. — hypericin
Who is the typical indirect realist here? — hypericin
How does the lack of awareness of a perceptual experience differ from the lack of a perceptual experience?
— Luke
There is no difference.
I'm not sure why you are getting hung up over "awareness of perceptual experience". We already agreed that the self is aware of perceptual experience. — hypericin
When I say, "the self is only directly aware of perceptual experience", to point out that the self is *not* directly aware of what the perception is *of*, nor any of the other components of perception, would you have me say, "the self is only directly perceptual experience"? The "aware of" is necessitated by English. — hypericin
Perceptual experience is a necessary but insufficient condition for perception. If the perceptual experience is there but other parts are missing, we have things like dreams, hallucinations, and nerve misfirings. — hypericin
For a "perception to be directly of worldly objects " makes sense to me by contrast with the case when the perception is mediated by other objects, i.e. a photo of an apple vs an apple. — hypericin
A perception happens when an object in the world directly (touch, taste) or indirectly (smell, sight, hearing) stimulates nerve endings — hypericin
the only part of this process the subject is directly aware of is the perceptual experience itself. — hypericin
The experience is of odor molecules. The whole point is we have no direct awareness of what experience is of. This is very obvious in the case of smell; until recently we didn't know odor molecules existed at all. All we are directly aware of is the smell, by way of which we are indirectly aware of odor molecules. — hypericin
This is not necessarily weaker, just different. It seems more accurate to say that perceptual experience is a representation, and that language and knowledge might be stimulated by the perceptual experience, or might not, depending on whether we attend to it . — hypericin
Perceptual experience without language and knowledge is still perceptual experience. But language and knowledge without perceptual experience is just language and knowledge. — hypericin
This is not nitpicking, these distinctions are crucial to the discussion. If knowledge of an object is part of the perceptual experience itself, it may be considered as immediate as the representation. But if it only follows/stimulated from the representation, then this seems implausible — hypericin
Moreover, if a perceptual experience is a representation (or is a representation plus language), then we do not have a perceptual experience of this representation.
— Luke
Agreed — hypericin
In your account, when we smell this unidentifiable smell, you say the perception involves a representation, but we are somehow unaware of this representation. — hypericin
My position is that perceptual experiences necessarily involve representation, but that we do not perceive a representation. Instead, the representation helps to form the perceptual experience, which is then directly of its object.
— Luke
What exactly are we doing then, when we smell something but are unaware what it is? — hypericin
Is the experience (G) different to the perception? Some might say that perception refers to our sensory experience of the world.
— Luke
That's true, some might say that. But it makes no sense to me... — AmadeusD
The Problem of Perception is a pervasive and traditional problem about our ordinary conception of perceptual experience. The problem is created by the phenomena of perceptual illusion and hallucination: if these kinds of error are possible, how can perceptual experience be what we ordinarily understand it to be: something that enables direct perception of the world?
A.D. Smith claims that what most authors have in mind in talking about the Problem of Perception is the “question of whether we can ever directly perceive the physical world”
It is not A-B. It is A-B-C-D-E-F and maybe G is the experience. This isn't complicated... — AmadeusD
Fair enough. I'm unsure that's supportable, or helpful.
Here, here and here make it plain (to me, at any rate) that 'perception' is the word used, in normal language situations, to refer to the process and faculty of getting from an object to an experience (those particular terms, mine). — AmadeusD
Using "a perception" is a bit misleading though as 'perception' is symbolizing the process, which we do not grasp fully, of getting from object to experience. The resulting images are one aspect, and likely the final result, of perception as a process. If that final product then labeled 'a perception', i think its a bit incoherent. Maybe that's an issue here. — AmadeusD
The odour molecules are a part of that unperceived causal chain.
— Luke
The odour molecules are perceived. I smell them. — Michael
I'm not saying that we perceive the causal chain. I'm simply trying to explain the inconsistency in your position. You say that there are no intermediaries between perception and some distal object, and yet there are; the odour molecules in the air are an intermediary between perception and the cake in the oven. — Michael
I'm also trying to understand why you say that the perception is of the cake in the oven, and not of the odour molecules, given that it is the odour molecules that stimulate the sense receptors in the nose. — Michael
...it commits the representationalist fallacy of confusing the object of awareness with the vehicle of awareness (Huemer 2001). One may perceive the environment (the object of awareness [i.e. the cake]) by means of an internal state (the vehicle of awareness [i.e. the odour molecules being converted into brain signals to produce the perception]), but to say that one perceives the vehicle of awareness itself is a category mistake that leads to the regress. The representationalist ends up claiming that we only perceive our internal states, which involves creating an internal representation of an internal representation (etc.), thereby ringing down the veil of perception. — Direct Perception: The View from Here
So how do you determine which object that is a part of the causal chain is the direct object of perception? — Michael
You just say it's the cake without explaining why it's the cake. — Michael
In what sense is an olfactory sensation caused by odour molecules in the air stimulating the sense receptors in my nose the "direct" perception of a cake in the oven? — Michael
Surely, the intermediary - whatever it is - does not provide a direct perception of its distal object, and allows only a representation of the object to be perceived without allowing the distal object to be immediately perceived. — Luke
If the above isn't actually your position, and i'm missing context, I am sorry. — AmadeusD
I directly perceive images, formed by my brain
— AmadeusD
You don't directly perceive images formed by your brain. Those images are your perceptions
— Luke
That is, in fact, what that sentence means. I do not see the distinction you're trying to make here. — AmadeusD
A representation is indirect. It is something re-presented. Unless you're positing that looking at an apple causes an apple to appear physically in my, physical mind.. I'm unsure how this question is sensible. — AmadeusD
It is literally enough to say that my sight is caused by light bouncing off an object an entering my body to reject Direct Realism. — AmadeusD
If the Realist argument boiled down to "I directly perceive images, formed by my brain, — AmadeusD
...which are indirect representations of distal objects... — AmadeusD
...caused by intermediaries between the objects and my sense organs" — AmadeusD
Let's take Direct Perception: The View from Here as a starting point: — Michael
I have argued that Gibson's ecological theory provides the elements of a plausible account of direct perception and offers means to fend off the standard arguments against it.
How does Gibson's approach to perception compare with the representationalist one? On the standard representationalist view, perception is conceived as a process of getting an image, description, or symbol—some representation—of the environmental object into the head or mind of the perceiver. The representation stands for something in the world and constitutes the object of awareness; the observer does not immediately perceive or experience the environment, but only her mental representation thereof.
However, getting a representation of the world into the head does not really solve the problem. First, it sets up a logical regress analogous to the classic homunculus problem of picture-in-the-head theories: if the object of awareness is an internal image or representation, who perceives the image or interprets the representation? Second, this returns us to Hume's problem, for interpreting a representation presumes prior knowledge of the environmental entities for which the representations stand, and how they correspond. Third, it commits the representationalist fallacy of confusing the object of awareness with the vehicle of awareness (Huemer 2001). One may perceive the environment (the object of awareness) by means of an internal state (the vehicle of awareness), but to say that one perceives the vehicle of awareness itself is a category mistake that leads to the regress. The representationalist ends up claiming that we only perceive our internal states, which involves creating an internal representation of an internal representation (etc.), thereby ringing down the veil of perception.
Alternatively, perception may be conceptualized as a relation between the perceiver and the environment, in which the perceiver is aware of or in contact with ordinary environmental objects. Gibson's view of direct perception is of this stripe. But the question persists: what goes on in the perceiver when she becomes aware of an environmental object, if not getting a description of it into her head? For Gibson, the observer's perceptual system, which is attuned to specific information, resonates to that information. There are thus coordinated changes of state in the environment and the perceiver. The perceptual system's activity covaries with distal environmental features and properties, enabling actions to be oriented to them. The object of awareness is the environmental object, and the vehicle of awareness is the resonating perceptual system.
The relationship between these percepts and distal objects is in a very literal physical sense indirect; there are a number of physical entities and processes that sit between the distal object and the visual percept in the causal chain. — Michael
If awareness of sensations is direct and awareness of objects is indirect then perception of objects is indirect. — Michael
So? Why is the object of perception not the specific thing that stimulates the sense receptors? Why do you get to go back a step in the causal chain and say that it's the cake? — Michael
Yes, you can describe what happens as "smelling cake" or you can describe it as "smelling odour molecules", much like you can describe it as "seeing fireworks" or you can describe it as "seeing lights in the sky". — Michael
That's not the same as saying that "perceptions are equal to their causes", so you prior question is misguided. — Michael
What does it mean to say that some sensation is the "direct" perception of some distal object? What conditions must be satisfied for some distal object X to be the "direct" object of perception? — Michael
What if, say, the cake has since been taken away and eaten, but the smell lingered. What am I (directly) smelling now? Nothing? The contents of my family's stomachs? Odour molecules in the air? — Michael
If we are directly aware of sensations and not directly aware of distal objects then we do not directly perceive distal objects. — Michael
The odour molecules in the air are the more proximal cause. So why is it that the interaction between the odour molecules in the air and the sense receptors in my nose is the (direct) perception of a cake in the oven? — Michael
The cause of the sensation is odour molecules in the air stimulating the sense receptors in my nose. The perception is (the rational awareness of) the sensation. — Michael
What's the connection between either of these things and the cake in the oven? — Michael
You provide an accurate account of the mechanics of perception (odour molecules stimulating the sense receptors in my nose, leading to a sensation) but then just throw in the non sequitur "therefore it's the direct perception of a cake in the oven" at the end with no explanation — Michael
Sensations are the intermediary that sit between rational awareness and distal objects. — Michael
The colour red is not a property of some distal object but a visual sensation. I am directly aware of the colour red and indirectly aware of a surface that reflects light with a wavelength of ~700nm. — Michael
Your intentionalism seems to accept that existence of such sensations but nonetheless wants to say that we are directly aware of the distal object, and even though something like odour molecules are the more proximal cause of the sensation. — Michael
You're just reasserting the irrelevant argument about grammar. — Michael
The causal chain of odour molecules entering the nose, interacting with the olfactory system, converting to brain signals, etc. can explain its effect: our smelling cake. But molecules entering the nose is not equivalent to smelling molecules, and molecules entering the nose, by itself, is insufficient to cause us to smell anything. Therefore, we don't smell odour molecules. The effect of this causal chain (the sensation of smell) cannot be its own cause. Moreover, it doesn't work the other way: the sensation is not an explanation for its distal cause. That is, smelling cake isn't an explanation for why odour molecules enter the nose, etc. So, I don't believe these are equivalent. — Luke
Everything you say here is consistent with indirect realism. — Michael
The pixels are the distal cause of the sensation. You can describe this event as "watching Joe Biden's inauguration" if you like, or you can describe it as "watching pixels" if you like. The latter is certainly an unusual way to describe it, but strictly speaking it's factually correct.
The odour molecules are the distal cause of the sensation. You can describe this event as "smelling a cake in the oven" if you like, or you can describe it as "smelling odour molecules" if you like. The latter is certainly an unusual way to describe it, but strictly speaking it's factually correct. — Michael
The "ordinary way of speaking" is not an accurate account of the ontology of perception. The "ordinary way of speaking" developed according to our naive, pre-scientific understanding of the world. — Michael
Even the SEP article adds:
Thus, like sense-datum theorists and adverbialists, intentionalists reject Direct Realist Presentation, and admit that we are not ever directly presented with ordinary objects, not even in veridical experience.
It's not clear to me what the intentionalist means by "we directly perceive ordinary objects that are not directly presented to us". It seems hopelessly confused. At best they're equivocating and mean two different things by "direct". — Michael
Your account is akin to saying: I'm not watching pixels activate on my television screen, I'm watching Joe Biden's inauguration. — Michael
This "semantic" directness is so far divorced from the phenomenological directness that concerns the epistemological problem of perception and the dispute between naive and indirect realists that it seems entirely misplaced in these discussions. — Michael
That it's "as direct as it can be" isn't that it's direct. The point made by indirect realists is that you can't smell the cake directly. Direct perception of a cake would require naive realism to be true, which it never is. This non-naive sense of "directness" is a misnomer. — Michael
Suffice to say, no, and i direct you to my previous post. The question contain therein is crucial to my understanding how you could possible think that was the question. — AmadeusD
if Bob told me what Jodie said this morning, I may indeed be aware of what Jodie said this morning, but only indirectly. What I am directly aware of, my actual experience, are the words Bob told me. — hypericin
When you are watching something, say a baseball game, you are experiencing it, but only indirectly, via the direct experience of the TV itself. The baseball game is casually connected to the TV, the features on the TV map to features of the game. Yet, what you experience is not the game itself, but in fact a representation of it. — hypericin
If we're only directly in touch with our perceptions, we're not directly in touch with objects. — AmadeusD
In what sense is an olfactory sensation caused by odour molecules in the air stimulating the sense receptors in my nose the "direct" perception of a cake in the oven? — Michael