ontological_realist
Member
Do animals perceive the same objects as humans perceive?
Do animals perceive the same objects as humans perceive?
Do animals perceive the same objects as humans perceive?
The objects of the physical world are there regardless of who or what perceives them, or how they are perceived, visual wavelength range, etc, perception never being complete information.
Do animals perceive the same objects as humans perceive?
Do animals perceive the same objects as humans perceive?
Not necessarily, huh. Well, the question is "do they ...", not, " necessarily, do they ...", and the answer to the question asked (even if what was asked doesn't match what he meant to ask) is just as I said, which is namely, "yes."Kharakov said:Not necessarily.
ah yes, 20 million years ago 2(10*1,000,000). Lovely time, and I think I still look good for my age. Wait, dang, milinia is 1000? Ok, so math isn't my strong suit: 2(10*1,000) or 20,000 years ago. I feel younger already.Those of us who were around a couple decamillenia ago
during the technological apex of human civilization, remember when a vast nanonetwork of integrated computational devices was launched. Current generation humans are not privy to the nanonetwork, or the fact that the majority of their experiences are generated by direct mind interface of aforementioned nanonetwork.
If the question were, "do scripts, ...." I might have more to say.The majority of animals are simply scripts nowadays, after the great extinction event ~6k ago, when the nanonetwork crashed, and shit got weird. Some animals are occupied by perceptive entities- the point being that the old adage "animals don't have souls" applies in many cases. I think it was supposed to be law, so that the scripts wouldn't be confused with beings, and this is what crashed the system (endless loop of saving things that weren't actually beings- something like that... turtles all the way down, if I remember correctly).
They are scripts, not perceptive beings, unless a perceptive being is funneled their code....
Not necessarily, huh. Well, the question is "do they ...", not, " necessarily, do they ...", and the answer to the question asked (even if what was asked doesn't match what he meant to ask) is just as I said, which is namely, "yes."Kharakov said:Not necessarily.
ah yes, 20 million years ago 2(10*1,000,000). Lovely time, and I think I still look good for my age. Wait, dang, milinia is 1000? Ok, so math isn't my strong suit: 2(10*1,000) or 20,000 years ago. I feel younger already.Those of us who were around a couple decamillenia ago
during the technological apex of human civilization, remember when a vast nanonetwork of integrated computational devices was launched. Current generation humans are not privy to the nanonetwork, or the fact that the majority of their experiences are generated by direct mind interface of aforementioned nanonetwork.
We were taught in school that we have five senses. Science has since taught us that we (humans) have at least a couple more. Some animals have kinds of senses we don't have, and some animals don't have some that we do. Since there is a variation in the number of senses, there will be variations in perception. Even differences in the intensity or magnitude of the senses between animals will account for a variance in perception. Two different people looking at the very same object may in fact have a different perception of the very same thing being perceived, especially after all the variables are taken into consideration.
The object being perceived, however, is what it is and can at that moment be no more or less than just what it is. The moon is the moon is the moon. To the bat's perception, be it what it may, and to the kitty or frog, perceive the moon as they might, it's still the object we all humans call the moon. The same object, yes. Differences in perception change that, not.
Now, you bring up an interest point. It's no longer like it used to be. We used to perceive the moon, but now that our beautiful world has been infested with nanotechnology run amuck, we can no longer perceive (at least not as directly as we once could) the actual objects; instead, nanotechnology has run interference allowing us to (and unknowingly by many to boot) access only the interface.
Where do we go from here? I have the answer, and the answer is to go back to the question. Never mind the things that lead us astray. Nevermind the way things now are, and chunk the principle of charity to the wind. When man does indeed look at an object, can the perception be different than the perception of animals doing the same? That's not what was asked, and with principles being tossed to the wind, we'll forgo the path leading to answer that. When man now looks upon what he believes to be an object, does he directly see what he thinks he's seeing? Wait, let us not answer that either, for recall (and recall only) just what the question invites us to ponder. If to answer the question we must suppose it during an era prior to nanotechnology advancement and implementation, then so be it.
If the question were, "do scripts, ...." I might have more to say.The majority of animals are simply scripts nowadays, after the great extinction event ~6k ago, when the nanonetwork crashed, and shit got weird. Some animals are occupied by perceptive entities- the point being that the old adage "animals don't have souls" applies in many cases. I think it was supposed to be law, so that the scripts wouldn't be confused with beings, and this is what crashed the system (endless loop of saving things that weren't actually beings- something like that... turtles all the way down, if I remember correctly).
They are scripts, not perceptive beings, unless a perceptive being is funneled their code....
No. That the world consists of objects is an artifact of our perception. Underlying physical reality is there, but the mapping to "objects" is done by our perception.
Not necessarily, huh. Well, the question is "do they ...", not, " necessarily, do they ...", and the answer to the question asked (even if what was asked doesn't match what he meant to ask) is just as I said, which is namely, "yes."Kharakov said:Not necessarily.
ah yes, 20 million years ago 2(10*1,000,000). Lovely time, and I think I still look good for my age. Wait, dang, milinia is 1000? Ok, so math isn't my strong suit: 2(10*1,000) or 20,000 years ago. I feel younger already.Those of us who were around a couple decamillenia ago
during the technological apex of human civilization, remember when a vast nanonetwork of integrated computational devices was launched. Current generation humans are not privy to the nanonetwork, or the fact that the majority of their experiences are generated by direct mind interface of aforementioned nanonetwork.
We were taught in school that we have five senses. Science has since taught us that we (humans) have at least a couple more. Some animals have kinds of senses we don't have, and some animals don't have some that we do. Since there is a variation in the number of senses, there will be variations in perception. Even differences in the intensity or magnitude of the senses between animals will account for a variance in perception. Two different people looking at the very same object may in fact have a different perception of the very same thing being perceived, especially after all the variables are taken into consideration.
The object being perceived, however, is what it is and can at that moment be no more or less than just what it is. The moon is the moon is the moon. To the bat's perception, be it what it may, and to the kitty or frog, perceive the moon as they might, it's still the object we all humans call the moon. The same object, yes. Differences in perception change that, not.
Now, you bring up an interest point. It's no longer like it used to be. We used to perceive the moon, but now that our beautiful world has been infested with nanotechnology run amuck, we can no longer perceive (at least not as directly as we once could) the actual objects; instead, nanotechnology has run interference allowing us to (and unknowingly by many to boot) access only the interface.
Where do we go from here? I have the answer, and the answer is to go back to the question. Never mind the things that lead us astray. Nevermind the way things now are, and chunk the principle of charity to the wind. When man does indeed look at an object, can the perception be different than the perception of animals doing the same? That's not what was asked, and with principles being tossed to the wind, we'll forgo the path leading to answer that. When man now looks upon what he believes to be an object, does he directly see what he thinks he's seeing? Wait, let us not answer that either, for recall (and recall only) just what the question invites us to ponder. If to answer the question we must suppose it during an era prior to nanotechnology advancement and implementation, then so be it.
If the question were, "do scripts, ...." I might have more to say.The majority of animals are simply scripts nowadays, after the great extinction event ~6k ago, when the nanonetwork crashed, and shit got weird. Some animals are occupied by perceptive entities- the point being that the old adage "animals don't have souls" applies in many cases. I think it was supposed to be law, so that the scripts wouldn't be confused with beings, and this is what crashed the system (endless loop of saving things that weren't actually beings- something like that... turtles all the way down, if I remember correctly).
They are scripts, not perceptive beings, unless a perceptive being is funneled their code....
Not necessarily, huh. Well, the question is "do they ...", not, " necessarily, do they ...", and the answer to the question asked (even if what was asked doesn't match what he meant to ask) is just as I said, which is namely, "yes."
ah yes, 20 million years ago 2(10*1,000,000). Lovely time, and I think I still look good for my age. Wait, dang, milinia is 1000? Ok, so math isn't my strong suit: 2(10*1,000) or 20,000 years ago. I feel younger already.Those of us who were around a couple decamillenia ago
during the technological apex of human civilization, remember when a vast nanonetwork of integrated computational devices was launched. Current generation humans are not privy to the nanonetwork, or the fact that the majority of their experiences are generated by direct mind interface of aforementioned nanonetwork.
We were taught in school that we have five senses. Science has since taught us that we (humans) have at least a couple more. Some animals have kinds of senses we don't have, and some animals don't have some that we do. Since there is a variation in the number of senses, there will be variations in perception. Even differences in the intensity or magnitude of the senses between animals will account for a variance in perception. Two different people looking at the very same object may in fact have a different perception of the very same thing being perceived, especially after all the variables are taken into consideration.
The object being perceived, however, is what it is and can at that moment be no more or less than just what it is. The moon is the moon is the moon. To the bat's perception, be it what it may, and to the kitty or frog, perceive the moon as they might, it's still the object we all humans call the moon. The same object, yes. Differences in perception change that, not.
Now, you bring up an interest point. It's no longer like it used to be. We used to perceive the moon, but now that our beautiful world has been infested with nanotechnology run amuck, we can no longer perceive (at least not as directly as we once could) the actual objects; instead, nanotechnology has run interference allowing us to (and unknowingly by many to boot) access only the interface.
Where do we go from here? I have the answer, and the answer is to go back to the question. Never mind the things that lead us astray. Nevermind the way things now are, and chunk the principle of charity to the wind. When man does indeed look at an object, can the perception be different than the perception of animals doing the same? That's not what was asked, and with principles being tossed to the wind, we'll forgo the path leading to answer that. When man now looks upon what he believes to be an object, does he directly see what he thinks he's seeing? Wait, let us not answer that either, for recall (and recall only) just what the question invites us to ponder. If to answer the question we must suppose it during an era prior to nanotechnology advancement and implementation, then so be it.
If the question were, "do scripts, ...." I might have more to say.The majority of animals are simply scripts nowadays, after the great extinction event ~6k ago, when the nanonetwork crashed, and shit got weird. Some animals are occupied by perceptive entities- the point being that the old adage "animals don't have souls" applies in many cases. I think it was supposed to be law, so that the scripts wouldn't be confused with beings, and this is what crashed the system (endless loop of saving things that weren't actually beings- something like that... turtles all the way down, if I remember correctly).
They are scripts, not perceptive beings, unless a perceptive being is funneled their code....
Wait. You have proof that the great nanonetwork crash of 6144 years ago did not happen? Otherwise, I'm pretty sure the animals are scripts. They are designed to look like they feel, but until furries came into existence and started inserting consciousness into them, they didn't feel.
The objects of the physical world are there regardless of who or what perceives them, or how they are perceived, visual wavelength range, etc, perception never being complete information.
Our perception of the world consisting of objects, i.e. things with boundaries, etc is just that, a matter of perception. A very useful model at that. And of course, the underlying physical phenomena exist, but how they would be divided into "objects" is a matter of perception.
Not necessarily, huh. Well, the question is "do they ...", not, " necessarily, do they ...", and the answer to the question asked (even if what was asked doesn't match what he meant to ask) is just as I said, which is namely, "yes."
ah yes, 20 million years ago 2(10*1,000,000). Lovely time, and I think I still look good for my age. Wait, dang, milinia is 1000? Ok, so math isn't my strong suit: 2(10*1,000) or 20,000 years ago. I feel younger already.Those of us who were around a couple decamillenia ago
during the technological apex of human civilization, remember when a vast nanonetwork of integrated computational devices was launched. Current generation humans are not privy to the nanonetwork, or the fact that the majority of their experiences are generated by direct mind interface of aforementioned nanonetwork.
We were taught in school that we have five senses. Science has since taught us that we (humans) have at least a couple more. Some animals have kinds of senses we don't have, and some animals don't have some that we do. Since there is a variation in the number of senses, there will be variations in perception. Even differences in the intensity or magnitude of the senses between animals will account for a variance in perception. Two different people looking at the very same object may in fact have a different perception of the very same thing being perceived, especially after all the variables are taken into consideration.
The object being perceived, however, is what it is and can at that moment be no more or less than just what it is. The moon is the moon is the moon. To the bat's perception, be it what it may, and to the kitty or frog, perceive the moon as they might, it's still the object we all humans call the moon. The same object, yes. Differences in perception change that, not.
Now, you bring up an interest point. It's no longer like it used to be. We used to perceive the moon, but now that our beautiful world has been infested with nanotechnology run amuck, we can no longer perceive (at least not as directly as we once could) the actual objects; instead, nanotechnology has run interference allowing us to (and unknowingly by many to boot) access only the interface.
Where do we go from here? I have the answer, and the answer is to go back to the question. Never mind the things that lead us astray. Nevermind the way things now are, and chunk the principle of charity to the wind. When man does indeed look at an object, can the perception be different than the perception of animals doing the same? That's not what was asked, and with principles being tossed to the wind, we'll forgo the path leading to answer that. When man now looks upon what he believes to be an object, does he directly see what he thinks he's seeing? Wait, let us not answer that either, for recall (and recall only) just what the question invites us to ponder. If to answer the question we must suppose it during an era prior to nanotechnology advancement and implementation, then so be it.
If the question were, "do scripts, ...." I might have more to say.The majority of animals are simply scripts nowadays, after the great extinction event ~6k ago, when the nanonetwork crashed, and shit got weird. Some animals are occupied by perceptive entities- the point being that the old adage "animals don't have souls" applies in many cases. I think it was supposed to be law, so that the scripts wouldn't be confused with beings, and this is what crashed the system (endless loop of saving things that weren't actually beings- something like that... turtles all the way down, if I remember correctly).
They are scripts, not perceptive beings, unless a perceptive being is funneled their code....
Wait. You have proof that the great nanonetwork crash of 6144 years ago did not happen? Otherwise, I'm pretty sure the animals are scripts. They are designed to look like they feel, but until furries came into existence and started inserting consciousness into them, they didn't feel.
No, I have no proof, nor do I have evidence, but then again I'm not denying that it happened. In fact, I'm quite content in accepting that not only did it happen but that it happened just as you say it happened. We have a disagreement, but it's not about that.
As to animals being scripts, well, it is there that we part ways; however, that's not to say that I disagree with you about there being scripts; indeed, what appears to be scripts (to you and I) are in fact scripts. They appear to be animals to the unwary, but they are scripts, not animals. My position is that animals are animals and that scripts are scripts ... and no animal is a script and no script is an animal. What I deny is what you say, and as a reminder, here is a quote of exactly what you said, "animals are scripts." But, that is false. Sure, what appears to be animals are scripts. On that, I'm happy to side with you, but what appears to be animals are not therefore animals just because they appear to be.
Not necessarily, huh. Well, the question is "do they ...", not, " necessarily, do they ...", and the answer to the question asked (even if what was asked doesn't match what he meant to ask) is just as I said, which is namely, "yes."
ah yes, 20 million years ago 2(10*1,000,000). Lovely time, and I think I still look good for my age. Wait, dang, milinia is 1000? Ok, so math isn't my strong suit: 2(10*1,000) or 20,000 years ago. I feel younger already.Those of us who were around a couple decamillenia ago
during the technological apex of human civilization, remember when a vast nanonetwork of integrated computational devices was launched. Current generation humans are not privy to the nanonetwork, or the fact that the majority of their experiences are generated by direct mind interface of aforementioned nanonetwork.
We were taught in school that we have five senses. Science has since taught us that we (humans) have at least a couple more. Some animals have kinds of senses we don't have, and some animals don't have some that we do. Since there is a variation in the number of senses, there will be variations in perception. Even differences in the intensity or magnitude of the senses between animals will account for a variance in perception. Two different people looking at the very same object may in fact have a different perception of the very same thing being perceived, especially after all the variables are taken into consideration.
The object being perceived, however, is what it is and can at that moment be no more or less than just what it is. The moon is the moon is the moon. To the bat's perception, be it what it may, and to the kitty or frog, perceive the moon as they might, it's still the object we all humans call the moon. The same object, yes. Differences in perception change that, not.
Now, you bring up an interest point. It's no longer like it used to be. We used to perceive the moon, but now that our beautiful world has been infested with nanotechnology run amuck, we can no longer perceive (at least not as directly as we once could) the actual objects; instead, nanotechnology has run interference allowing us to (and unknowingly by many to boot) access only the interface.
Where do we go from here? I have the answer, and the answer is to go back to the question. Never mind the things that lead us astray. Nevermind the way things now are, and chunk the principle of charity to the wind. When man does indeed look at an object, can the perception be different than the perception of animals doing the same? That's not what was asked, and with principles being tossed to the wind, we'll forgo the path leading to answer that. When man now looks upon what he believes to be an object, does he directly see what he thinks he's seeing? Wait, let us not answer that either, for recall (and recall only) just what the question invites us to ponder. If to answer the question we must suppose it during an era prior to nanotechnology advancement and implementation, then so be it.
If the question were, "do scripts, ...." I might have more to say.The majority of animals are simply scripts nowadays, after the great extinction event ~6k ago, when the nanonetwork crashed, and shit got weird. Some animals are occupied by perceptive entities- the point being that the old adage "animals don't have souls" applies in many cases. I think it was supposed to be law, so that the scripts wouldn't be confused with beings, and this is what crashed the system (endless loop of saving things that weren't actually beings- something like that... turtles all the way down, if I remember correctly).
They are scripts, not perceptive beings, unless a perceptive being is funneled their code....
Wait. You have proof that the great nanonetwork crash of 6144 years ago did not happen? Otherwise, I'm pretty sure the animals are scripts. They are designed to look like they feel, but until furries came into existence and started inserting consciousness into them, they didn't feel.
No, I have no proof, nor do I have evidence, but then again I'm not denying that it happened. In fact, I'm quite content in accepting that not only did it happen but that it happened just as you say it happened. We have a disagreement, but it's not about that.
As to animals being scripts, well, it is there that we part ways; however, that's not to say that I disagree with you about there being scripts; indeed, what appears to be scripts (to you and I) are in fact scripts. They appear to be animals to the unwary, but they are scripts, not animals. My position is that animals are animals and that scripts are scripts ... and no animal is a script and no script is an animal. What I deny is what you say, and as a reminder, here is a quote of exactly what you said, "animals are scripts." But, that is false. Sure, what appears to be animals are scripts. On that, I'm happy to side with you, but what appears to be animals are not therefore animals just because they appear to be.
I'm pretty sure I mentioned furries.