Sculptor wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 3:50 pm
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 2:45 pm
Sculptor wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 10:07 am
That is not to say that what we perceive in not part of reality, but it definitely demonstrates that our perceptions are partial.
If your perception is only partial, how did you come to know it?
Because science reveals so much more and has shown that how we sense is not the same as what we are sensing. For example the sense of hungriness is actually low blood sugar - but it does not feel like low blood sugar.
How should low blood sugar feel?
Sculptor wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 3:50 pm
And when we see an object we are not seeing the object we are seeing the light reflected from the object. When we see red what we are actually seeing is a different wavelength of ligth such that the "red object" is absorbing all other wavelengths.
Of course, that is how we see objects. What makes you think we are supposed to see them some other way.
Sculptor wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 3:50 pm
We do not see the reality of it but we see what we like to call "red".
So when I see something red, because it produces, transmits, or reflects light in the wavelength that is red, it's actually a different color I'm seeing? If the wavelength is really red and that's what I see, what's unreal about it?
Sculptor wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 3:50 pm
Need I go on?. When we hear something what we are actually perceiving is virbrations in the air.
Yes, that's what sound is--hearing vibrations withing a certain range. How else would we perceive sound if that is not right?
Sculptor wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 3:50 pm
The same
gap between ANY sense you can name and what is the actual object of perception is always present.
What, "gap." So far you've only exlained how we do perceive existence as it actually is.
Sculptor wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 3:50 pm
Shall I go on? Then there is a whole host of different things out there which we have no mechanism to perceive. Such as all objects which are beyond the ability of light to reflect from. The electron microscope has revealed things that no amount of magnification can show due to the limits of light wavelengths.
But if what we see is deceptive, how can it be that what we see by means of instruments is correct? If I use a microscope to examine a drop of blood, and I think I see little red corpuscles, they aren't really little red corpuscles, according to your view, but something else. I don't think that can be right.
Sculptor wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 3:50 pm
Shall I go on? There is an entire body of knowledge of illusion in sound and vision that also demonstrate this no brainer.
According to your view, everything is an illusion. If you cannot know what reality actually is, how can you know what you perceive is an illusion?
Sculptor wrote: ↑Sun Aug 08, 2021 3:50 pm
Shall I go on? Synesthesia shows that sounds can have colour. We are born with appraoximately the same senses but the perception is not the mendated or necessary result of the input.
I have always enjoyed that particular joke. If someone claims to hear colors, or see sounds, or have other confused perceptions, they would have to know what the right perceptions were to know theirs was different. Of course, the real problem with all psychological nonsense is, there is no way to test it. No one can actually know what anyone else's perceptual experience is and there is no way to know if those making such claims are telling the truth or not.
Thanks for the link. I'm glad it included interoception, something that is sadly neglected, especially by those who confuse physiological reactions for what they call intuition and, "feelings."
I saw nothing I disagreed with in that article, because it only reinforces what I already knew about the
absolute reliability of perception.