J. Adam Carter

This Is Epistemology


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yellow,11 so it appears that the Phenomenal Principle must be mistaken.

      2.47 It is possible to veridically perceive the location of an object, so it should be possible for the immediate object of your friend's awareness to be located in just the spot that yours is. If the immediate object of your friend's awareness occupies that region and is yellow, yours cannot be white. And yet it must be, according to the Phenomenal Principle.

      2.49 As the popularity of indirect realism waned, naïve realism came back into fashion. One nice thing about direct realism is that it allows for the possibility that we're in direct contact with things in the external world. Thus, when we're not hallucinating, it might seem that experience gives us strong support for our beliefs about the external world – when such things are made manifest, we needn't worry that our evidence isn't strong enough to justify belief.

      2.50 The challenge for the direct realist is to account for the possibility of hallucination and illusion. This is no trivial task. We can only gesture at some ideas about how the direct realist might address the concerns discussed above.

      2.52 Although nothing can be both F and non‐F at the same time, something can be F and an apparent non‐F at the same time. To account for the possibility of illusion, the direct realist might say that when we are dealing with a case of perceptual illusion, we are directly aware of an OMO and its properties. These include properties like having a certain shape and color and having a certain apparent shape and apparent color. A wall can be both white (its color) and appear yellow (its apparent color). A coin can be both circular (its shape) and appear elliptical (its apparent shape). You can be both a non‐vampiric human (your kind) and appear to be a vampire (your apparent kind). As long as an object's apparent properties are understood as properties that this object has (given its non‐appearance properties, the conditions under which it is perceived), illusion might be no problem for the direct realist.

      2.54 What makes the disjunctivist view disjunctivist is that it offers a disjunctive account of experience:

      On this approach, we don't think of experience as the core that a perception and some indistinguishable hallucination have in common. True, a subject might not be able to tell one from the other, but the same might hold true for a lemon and a piece of soap. We wouldn't conclude from this that some lemon and some piece of soap share something in common because some subject couldn't tell the one from the other.