I don't see him claiming we have *no* access to the world, just no direct access. Indirection still allows access to empirical facts, just not absolute certainly about those facts: everything could always be a simulation, or whatnot. But absolute certainty is overrated. — hypericin
Well, to begin we would have to identify the objects.Wittgenstein does not do this. We do not even know what these objects are let alone knowing internal or external properties except that internal to them they must have the ability to combine with other objects. — Fooloso4
If I am to know an object, though I need not know its external properties, I must know all
its internal properties. (2.01231)
If all objects are given, then at the same time all possible states of affairs are also given. (20124)
It would seem that we know these objects in so far as they are the source of the possibilities of the world. From themselves they generate the world through the ways in which they combine.
There is a bottom up order to the universe. — Fooloso4
Declaring "I have two hands," may or may not fall under the category of conviction, i.e., there are contexts where it might be appropriate. — Sam26
Isn't the whole concept of scientific or natural law built on the assumption of there being a natural order? — Wayfarer
Desiring machines — Joshs
So, either you accept that our sight system is factually an indirect system (which, on what's considered the empirical facts, it is without debate) — AmadeusD
If what you mean to say is that I cannot rely on the "empirical facts" of our sight system to deduce that we do not directly experience an object (of sight) then you've proved my case far better than I ever could. — AmadeusD
Misology is not best expressed in the radical skeptic, who questions the ability of reason to comprehend or explain anything. For in throwing up their arguments against reason they grant it an explicit sort of authority. Rather, misology is best exhibited in the demotion of reason to a lower sort of "tool," one that must be used with other, higher goals/metrics in mind. The radical skeptic leaves reason alone, abandons it. According to Schindler, the misolog "ruins reason." — Count Timothy von Icarus
THe fiction is the particularly perniciious habit of ignoring the empirical facts when discussion perception. This has been ignored. — AmadeusD
Hence my existence also cannot be regarded as inferred from the proposition "I think," as Descartes held (for otherwise the major premise, "Everything that thinks, exists" would have to precede it), — CPR, Kant, B421
I would have thought that an Indirect Realist would also have said "I see what appears to be a bent stick". — RussellA
We can't falsify it; we can't demonstrate it. But we can assume it. — Banno
Perhaps conservation laws are take to be true in the way axioms are - in order to get on with doing stuff. Noether's theorem shows how conservation laws are a result of assumptions of symmetry and continuity — Banno
So is the conservation of energy a fact about the world, or a way of checking that our talk about energy is consistent? And if this latter, then it is not itself consistent, but the measure against which we determine consistency. — Banno
And if it is not even true, nro false, how is it consistent? — Banno
The statistician George Box said "All models are wrong but some are useful." — Gary Venter
I'd be interested to know what those may be. But I think it takes more than imagination to create a work of art. — Ciceronianus
There might be shame in attempting to continue, rather than turn aside. Coherence has merit. — Banno
The Indirect Realist says that in the sentence "I see a straight stick that appears bent", the word "see" is being used as a figure of speech and not literally, as in "I can clearly see your future".
The Direct Realist says that there is no difference between a word being used as a figure of speech or literally. — RussellA
I dont know why you want to say that , but I can tell you that in Husserl’s phenomenology objects don’t just appear to a subject as what they are in themselves in all their assumed completeness, but are constituted by the subject through intentional acts. — Joshs
On the one hand "I see a bent stick" and on the other hand "I see a straight stick". — RussellA
Maybe you can help Janus? Why do you and I want to say, and why do some phenomenologists say, that the things we perceive present themselves to us? I feel I’m missing something obvious. — Jamal
Well, nature very well could BE the laws. — flannel jesus
Direct Realism is aka Naïve Realism. Indirect Realism is aka Representational Realism,. — RussellA
To add my two-cents worth, Heidegger’s fundamental ontology, what he calls also the ontic-ontological difference, is not at all the same thing as the traditional philosophical meaning of ontology as the meaning of extant beingness. — Joshs
it wasn’t posited as either so I’ll just leave that. — AmadeusD
see representations is equivalent to saying we see seeings
— Janus
Yet, this is exactly what is intimated by the claims of direct realists, — AmadeusD
