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First of all, as far as I can tell, the notion of sense-datum, as @Pharoah suggested is no longer in use. However IR is still very in play.
I don't think this is a valid argument against IR. It is a realist model. So to perceive reality we have to interact with reality.As an argument against indirect perception. If we perceive via sense-datum, we should know how many speckles, instead we have to look and count.
We see <HEN> as hen.Kane n says we see surface reflectance as color.
First of all, as far as I can tell, the notion of sense-datum, as @Pharoah suggested is no longer in use. However IR is still very in play.
So arguing against IR by arguing against sense-datum I think is misleading.
I think a current IR would use the term brain states instead of sense datum.
I don't think this is a valid argument against IR. It is a realist model. So to perceive reality we have to interact with reality.
In other words on both accounts IR and DR, perception involves looking.
I've never read an IR account of perception which didn't involve looking.
We see <HEN> as hen.
On various philosophy forums I've participated on, there have been arguments between those who call themselves 'direct realists' and those who call themselves 'indirect realists'. The question is apparently about perception. Do we experience reality directly, or do we experience it indirectly?
Of course they can't. But you don't seem to be speaking of strictly perception, you're also talking about conceptions, ideologies, culture, etc.Let us take as an example of what we 'perceive' the current atrocities being committed against helpless children (and their parents) who arrive at our southern border seeking asylum. What do you see, perceive, understand about that reality? What do Trump's followers see, perceive, understand? How can quantum mechanics or speculations about photons help us to understand this contentious and debased reality in which we are living?
Yes, sense-data models of IR seem to be MB dualist models.Argument against sense data and therefore against indirect realism a la the Speckled Hen
Sense-Data (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Just focusing on the philosophical side of this debate, there is one issue. (Note that no mention of sense datum has been mentioned. Instead we have "internal representation."
The one issue: we can quibble over the term "representation." Does it mean miniature replica? Or can it simply mean humancentric?
I think that until we do that, we are left spinning our wheels looking for remote 'monist explanations' of how that which is presented to us in conscious experience (and even in preconscious, pre-reflective, experience) is never captured in discrete 'representations'.
And I'm saying that I don't believe that DR philosophers would say "the difference between DR and IR is semantics"...Im saying the difference is semantics.
How would you characterize the difference between DR and IR?
And I'm saying that I don't believe that DR philosophers would say "the difference between DR and IR is semantics"...
How would I characterize the difference? I probably wouldn't.
Incidentally, if one is not a DR does one become, by default, IR?... if one is a realist, that is...
OK... there is only one book on dr v ir.... you guys are batting the ball from one side of the court to the other. Perhaps one of you needs to read that book!@Soupie what @Pharoah is pointing at is the history of the debate ... and there always is one. Things make more sense often in that context. Sometimes it does wash out to semantics.
It takes more than an afternoon on Google to go through one of these things, but once you've done it for a few, you're certainly not an expert in the history of philosophy but you know a few things ... for example that there is rarely a neat and tidy finish to the debate, some find it incredible that philosophers are still talking about panpsychism for example, others think those who find it incredible, are themselves incredible ... and so it goes ... and that leads to 2) (or B. if you prefer), which is that there is no eight count in philosophy, resurrection of the long dead is the norm - in fact, rarely does an idea go all the way down - so are sense datum passe? Maybe.
Here is what claims to be
"... the only book available that combines thorough discussion of the arguments behind both direct and indirect realism in a single resource, and is required reading for neuroscientists, neurophilosophers, cognitive scientists and anyone interested in conscious perception and the mind-brain connection."
Published in January of this year ...
Direct versus Indirect Realism - 1st Edition
"Direct versus Indirect Realism: A Neurophilosophical Debate on Consciousness brings together leading neuroscientists and philosophers to explain and defend their theories on consciousness. The book offers a one-of-a-kind look at the radically opposing theories concerning the nature of the objects of immediate perception—whether these are distal physical objects or phenomenal experiences in the conscious mind. Each side—neuroscientists and philosophers—offers accessible, comprehensive explanations of their points-of-view, with each side also providing a response to the other that offers a unique approach on opposing positions."
OK... there is only one book on dr v ir.... you guys are batting the ball from one side of the court to the other. Perhaps one of you needs to read that book!
I ask these questions not because I don't know the answer or want to know what the answers are (and should therefore google it) but to provoke you into thinking about them as a way of exploring what the terms imply etc.
. . . Here is what claims to be "... the only book available that combines thorough discussion of the arguments behind both direct and indirect realism in a single resource, and is required reading for neuroscientists, neurophilosophers, cognitive scientists and anyone interested in conscious perception and the mind-brain connection."
Direct versus Indirect Realism - 1st Edition
@Soupie resources on dr/ir
Direct and Indirect Perception - Bibliography - PhilPapers
"About this topic
Summary
This area is structured by three central questions. A first question is: What does it mean to perceive something directly? There are two standard ways in which this question has been answered."
followed by a listing of key works.
Search on:
"philpapers topics in direct realism"
...or any "topics in x" gives a bibliography sortable by year, author, etc.
For example:
Naive and Direct Realism - Bibliography - PhilPapers
399 in this category and it lists sibling categories