AshvinP wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2024 2:15 pmlorenzop wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2024 2:23 amMainstream materialism does not suggest the world "is only a dream". Mainstream materialism suggests the world is physical, and our perception of this physical world is highly veridical. I'm not defending it, just pointing this out.Güney27 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2024 12:38 am Reading Owen Barfield StA and PoF again made me thinking about the standard theory of perception in the current perspective of mainstream materialism. If, like the materialist think, the world around us is only a dream, somehow generated trough our senses and the stimulis of the unrepresented, that would implicate that the brain and the senses are dream pictures too, and that would negate any knowledge. It would defeat its own axioms. Like Barfield pointed out, that would mean there was no evolution we could know about, and all neuroscience would be worthless. It’s a very simple fact that anybody without training in these fields could understand quite easily. Realizing this more deeply made me think that if it is so easy to acknowledge, why the mainstream world view hasn’t changed after this works been published. Either I don’t understand the mainstream materialistic view completely, or they are really not thinking that far. If this line of thought is completely valid, I’m what sense would scientific research like levins for example, would make really sense under the assumption mentioned above. I really try to understand the materialistic thinking person in a sense. But I don’t know to many in person which are very educated in philosophy or science in real life, which I could ask to investigate their thought context.
Perhaps you're suggesting materialism says our perception is dream-like - in that like dreams, our perception of the world is generated within our skull. Even so, materialists do not suggest the world is a dream. I think you are misrepresenting materialism.
In addition to Anil Seth, I would also point out Carlo Rovelli who JW referenced and seems to align closely with. There is an unmistakable trend of materialist thinkers moving more and more toward 'the world is only a dream/hallucination/simulation" etc. We have to realize that materialism as a philosophical outlook (but not necessarily as a way of living) has vastly evolved since the 19th century where the physical world we perceive was considered 'real' and 'veridical'. And this could be the only logical progression for it, since the role of thinking-thought (still often referred to as 'the brain') in structuring perception is becoming more and more evident. Therefore perception becomes more and more subjectivized like thought and whatever inconceivable domain is left over is postulated as the "true reality".
As Barfield put it, "Twentieth-century science has abolished the 'thing' altogether; and twentieth-century philosophy (that part of it, at least, which takes no account of imagination) has obediently followed suit. There are no objects, says the voice of Science, there are only bundles of waves or possibly something else; adding that, although it is convenient to think of them, it would be naïve to suppose that the waves or the something else actually exist. There is no 'referent', echoes the philosophy of linguistic analysis deferentially, no substance or underlying reality which is 'meant' by words."
For JW, Rovelli, et al., it is becoming naïve to suppose that any familiar sensory perception or concept can illuminate the veridical structure of reality. Likewise, Steiner predicted the intensification of this trend which was already evident at the beginning of the 20th century:
At present the physicists only talk about there being nothing outside us but vibrations, and that it is these that, for example, bring about red in us. What the physicists dream of today will come true. At present they only dream of it, but it will then be true. People will... "know" that all those things are caused by their own organism. They will consider it a superstition that there are colors outside that tint objects. The outer world will be grey in grey and human beings will be conscious of the fact that they themselves put the colors into the world... People who then see only the outer reality will say to the others who still see colors in their full freshness, “Oh, you dreamers! Do you really believe there are colors outside in nature? You do not know that you are only dreaming inside yourself that nature has these colors.” Outer nature will become more and more a matter of mathematics and geometry. ... People in the future will not believe that the capacity to see colors in the outer world has any objective significance; they will ascribe it purely to subjectivity.
- Rudolf Steiner, Necessity and Freedom (1916)
For JW, though, he at least leaves a door open for aesthetic experience, similar to Schop. I wonder if he is familiar with Barfield, who also philosophized about the spiritual nature of poetry and the evolution of consciousness from 'original participation' to our modern human solipsistic state, and from that to 'final participation'.
Ashvin,
Isn’t that the only possibility in materialistic thinking. When one says, that quality’s are secondary, emergent phenomena which somehow spring into existence, then the secondary qualities are something equivalent to a lawful hallucination. Because like anil says, in the brain there is no sound, no color and so on but only quantitative information input, so there are no qualities outside of it. I’m not very familiar with materialistic philosophy and it different view points, so I just try to follow there thoughts. Did you read what Coleridge thought from Barfield? Seems like he has the same realization that Steiner had few decades before him.