Indirect Realism Flashcards

1
Q

Indirect realism

A

The immediate objects of perception are mind-dependent objects that are caused by and represent mind-independent objects

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2
Q

What is sense data

A
  • private sense data that no one can see
  • the content of percpetual experience
  • sense data are exactly as they seem
  • sense data only exist whilst they are being experienced
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3
Q

Argument from non-veridical perception

A
  • in illusions and hallucinations, when we perceive something having some property there must be something that has this property
  • it cant be a mind-independent object, so it must be a mind-dependent object
  • NVP is subjectively indistinguishable from VP
  • when two things are subjectively indistinguishable, they are perceptions of the same thing
  • therefore if we’re perceiving mind-dependent objects in NVP, we’re also perceiving MDO in veridical perception
  • immediate objects of perception are always mind-dependent objects
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4
Q

Locke’s primary and secondary distinctions

A
  • primary qualities -> utterly inseparable from physical objects - extension,shape,motion,number and solidity - neither which require perception in order to be there
  • cut them up, still have a shape if not the same
  • secondary qualities -> physical objects have that are nothing but “powers to produce various sensations in us”, colours, sounds, tastes, smells and temperature (reliant on sense data)
  • significant difference between the world we perceive it and the world as it is itself
  • Locke claims we dont perceive physical objects directly because if we did we’d perceiver them how they really are
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5
Q

Indirect realism leads to scepticism about the existence of mind-independent objects

A
  • if the immediate objects of perception are mind-dependent objects, we can never know what they are caused by because we can never perceive anything but them.
  • if we only perceive sense data how do we know anything about the external world
  • scepticism is the view that we can’t know one particular claim
  • we cant perceive them so how do we know they’re there?
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6
Q

Response to issue of scepticism: Locke’s argument from the involuntary nature of our experience

A
  • we don’t chose what we perceive, perception isn’t like memory or imagination
  • my perceptual experiences must be produced in my mind by some exterior cause, which is a mind-independent object
  • scepticism isnt true in leading from indirect realism
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7
Q

Argument from Berkeley-> we cannot know the nature of mind-independent objects because mind-dependent ideas cannot be like mind-independent objects

A
  • we cant know that mind-independent objects have qualities that resemble our experience of them
    -^^ we cant known ‘things that we see” have qualities that can relate to them
  • sense data ‘screen’ stops our direct perception
  • what causes a bruise is nothing like a bruise -> the bashing of your hand isn’t visible, the effect of the bruise isn’t caused
  • an idea isn’t like anything else, ideas are very different from mind-independent objects
  • if indirect realism is true then we cant know the nature of mind-independent objects
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8
Q

Response to Berkley

A
  • claim that the mind-dependent objects represent mind-independent objects, but not by resembling them
  • the pattern of causal relation between mind-independent objects and mind-dependent ones is very detailed and systematic and in terms of complex causation ->
  • we can explain how sense data represent physical objects
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9
Q

response to scepticism 2: Trotter Cockburn, the argument from the coherence of the various kinds of experience

A
  • the different mind-dependent objects we perceive agree with one another; cohere
  • suggesting they all come from/caused by mind-independent objects
  • we are able to confirm our experience using a different sense; and we are able to predict one experience from another
  • therefore, it is not true that indirect realism leads to scepticism about the existence of mind-independent objects
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10
Q

response to scepticism: the external world is the best hypothesis

A
  • because we can never get beyond our sense-data to check what’s causing them, we can never be absolutely sure
  • the most likely cause of our sense data is the external world and its MIO
  • there is no other explanation as simple and plausable
    p1. either physical objects exist and cause my sense-data, or physical objects do not exist and do not cause my sense data
    p2. i can’t prove either claim is true or false
    c1. therefore, i have to treat them as a hypotheses
    p3. the hypothesis that physical objects exist and cause my sense-data is better
    c2. therefore, physical objects exist and cause my sense data
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