Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pm
It doesn't seem you detect a difference between the senses (see, touch, taste, and so on) and the "observer," the entity "behind the eyes," so to speak, who is making sense out of the external stimuli.
Yes, in a way.
Have you ever found (and with this I mean: directly perceived/experienced) this "entity "behind the eyes"?
If not, could it be that it is not more than an idea? Simply a thought that arises and states "Hey, I see this apple over there!"
Could it be that this thought is not an "observer" but rather a simple commentary issued by ... no one?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pm
I do see a problem there. A rudimentary sensor, a mechanical device, can be created to indicate a difference in things like colour or texture. So in the senses sense, the sensor can "detect" the difference. But it is utterly devoid of potential to interpret, categorize, relate or process the difference it detects. It is not an observer.
Agree
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pm
So if experience is no more than the externals of taste, touch, feel, and so on, then experience is what a rudimentary sensor is having. But I don't think anybody reasonable wants to say that's what the sensor is having.
Well... direct experience is not limited to sensory input, but also consists of thought.
Thought provides the interpretation - and this is very helpful in many ways.
But it also "invents" certain entities that are not based on (or derived from) what is directly experienced via these "sensors" - for example: it invents an observer, or a separate ego-self, which no matter how much one looks, will never be found (via the senses), but can only be thought of...
This is an interesting realisation... and one can either ignore it or dig deeper (and see what else is actually only imagined).
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pmWell, I see a problem. It's the one above. If the five senses are all that are necessary to constitute an "experience," then there is no need for an observer. But if an observer exists, then something different from Materialism is true. And something more than the five senses is required for an "experience" to happen.
I tend to stick with what I can experience directly. I see, hear, taste, smell and feel (sense of touch) - and then there is conceptual thought.
If the conceptual interpretation of the experience comes up with an entity that I have, so far, never experienced (eg: this observer), then I would put it into the "imaginary"-box.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pmIt's not merely a difference of
quantity, though, but a difference of
quality. No matter how "complex" the stimuli picked up by the five senses are, they don't even constitute an "experience" without an observer processing them and making them into something. An experience is
qualitatively different from sensors being stimulated. It's actually a different thing.
I am well aware that in the physical sense, there is a certain process of conversion happening - maybe a bit like an analog to digital conversion in a computer system and then there is a certain program/algorithm interpreting this converted data.
But where is this separate observer? As I see it, the observer is not more than another output of the algorithm interpreting sensed data (meaning: a thought).
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pm
I would have to say this isn't so. After all, the same apple may taste bitter to one person and sweet to another -- say if one has just been eating a sugary dessert, and the other just had a steak. So it's not the "taste" itself that is being "true." It's variable. Rather, the difference is being marked by two different observers of exactly the same object.
1) Bitter and sweet are only conceptual interpretations.
2) Of course every experience is unique - there simply is no experience like any other.
This still doesnt mean that there are two "observers of exactly the same object" - in direct experience there are neither objects nor observers.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pmThis almost sounds Platonic. Plato thought there was a "realm of ideal forms" where the "truth" about things like the taste of apple sort of floated about eternally. I'm sure you don't believe that, but what you just said sounds a lot like Plato.
You are right, I don't believe in a "realm of ideal forms" (or an ideal anything)
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pm
You can think of an apple, but you cannot experience "apple" directly.
This is true.
Great! I agree! So if you cannot experience "apple", then you cannot experience any object, right?
Is the observer an object? If yes, then you cannot experience it... If no... then what is it?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pmI guess I could sort of agree with this, if I was sure I understood what you mean by "made up."
With "made up" I mean thought into objective existence. As you said: One cannot directly experience "apple" - yet we believe that this separate object "apple" exists in its own right. While this is handy thing for communication (and many other areas of daily life) its actually "made up" - not directly experienced.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pmKant said there were two real things in play: one was the external world, of which we have no
absolutely correct experience, and the experience that is occasioned by the external world, but is really the observer's processed version of the impressions from the senses. So we have a sort of
relatively correct experience that we get from reality. But even Kant did not separate the external world entirely from the internal observer; after all, with no external world, there would be no internal experience. And the internal experience is largely stimulated by the actual activities of the outside world.
Well... this might sound a bit unusual, but... according to direct experience there is no inside or outside, there is no external world - there is just the experience.
This might be hard to swallow, it runs against all conventional belief - but then again... there are certain parts in life (eg night time dreams) where this realisation is commonly accepted...
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:36 pmWhat I'm saying is that the truth is a bit of a tightrope walk between two incorrect beliefs. On one side is the falsehood that we observers see the world as it actually is, in all cases; on the other is the error that nothing we see is real, and reality itself is entirely a matter of interpretation.
To me, everything that is directly experienced is real, while, on the other hand, all interpretations are only real within the conceptual world that thought has created. Reality is non-dual, while the conceptual world is dualistic. These two realities seem to meet - we tend to believe that our relativistic interpretations correspond to base reality - , but they actually never do.