I get that there might be "two" but IMO there is just the one, I understand what you're saying though. But I'm more trying to argue against Lesswrong here.Atla wrote: ↑Wed May 14, 2025 8:20 pmWell we do directly experience a part of reality, the representation in our head. It's not that people aren't people, but that there is the noumenal person "out there" and the representation "in here" that we experience. So there are actually two.Darkneos wrote: ↑Wed May 14, 2025 8:09 pmWell that was something else I thought of too. We don't directly experience reality, so talking about what it "really is" is just another story.Atla wrote: ↑Wed May 14, 2025 4:35 am
We can't get outside of our own minds and see the external territory directly. That sounds like direct realism deep down, the position that "rational", "lesswrong" people no longer take imo.
Direct realism is dead, rather the remaining debate is between indirect realism (we experience a representation in our head, that lets us infer what the territory is like to some degree, but technically things like quarks and quantum fields are also just representations in our head), and that horrific Kantian philosophy (we can't infer anything at all about the territory, so we just have to guess that there are other minds and they work the same way as ours). I subscribe to indirect realism of course which is also the scientific position, but philosophy forums are home to many Kantians.
Map vs territory is also used for contrasting two or more levels of thinking in our head: the concrete perception of the world and abstract thinking about that perception, there can be one or more abstraction layers.
I dunno, I'm still kinda wonky from it. I'm trying to find a way to resolve it because I keep regarding people as not people.
And in evedyday life we can forget about all this stuff and just go back to living life as direct realists. So people are people. It's the optimal philosophy imo. I just drop most of these insights most of the time. No one in my workplace for example has any idea that I'm into philosophy.
It's not exactly a new idea, Plato's cave and all that, but...I don't really see the use in worrying about it. Speaking for myself, there are people, there is a world, etc, and that's enough for me. We could argue about whether the representation is reality or not, but...I dunno, it just doesn't sound compelling.
Because then what would you do if you found out? It was like with what I was saying about what would I do if I found the truth of reality and had no answer. Because personally...I don't have a life. And I'm finding out that just wanting to "be right" is a poor substitute for living life.