When you look at a tomato you may see the shape, which is typically round. If the tomato is ripe, then you also see that it is red. When you see a tomato you know it's there because you can feel its smooth skin and rough stem. You distinguish it as a tomato due to its unique set of attributes such as the way it tastes. The color red is a particular attribute of a ripe tomato. How did the tomato acquire the attribute of red? Well we don't know why tomatoes evolved to be red, but we do know that red is a classification of colors. So what are colors? Colors are a property which is an effect by which light is emitted off of an object and then received through our focal lenses or eyes. Because humans have a significant mental capacity, we are able to take these properties in light and classify them into what we call categories. Due to our evolutionary survival skills, our minds were built to categorize in order to distinguish between predator and prey. Without categorizing things all around us, we would not be able to distinguish a threat from a piece of nourishing food which would make survival impossible. Our ability to classify is critical as a living species.
Now that we understand a little about colors and how we see them, that leads us to the question... Is red real? Well we know the difference in light is a real occurrence, but the idea of the color-- red is not real. Red is a classification of a color and a color is an idea. An idea is intangible. It is not objective in nature. It merely exists in our minds. But if it exists in our minds then it must be real? Well aliens from Mars exist in many peoples' minds, but there has yet to be any truth come from that premise. By definition, real is to "[exist] as a thing or occurring in fact; not imagined or supposed." We don't imagine the color red, we see it and then we process it. It is the transfer between the occurrence of the property being emitted off the tomato to the classification we make it as color where it is no longer real. We have to remember that ideas are not real even when they are attributes of matter in the objective world we live in. Lets put my argument to the test. If red was real then it must be a known fact to everyone. If a person is color-blind then they have no perception of the color red, therefore if you asked a color-blind person what color a ripe tomato looks like, they would likely give a wrong answer. If it is a known fact that the color of a ripe tomato was red then why didn't the color-blind person know it as a fact? That is because perceptions are not facts, nonetheless the idea of red varies from a color-blind person to a normal-visioned person. This proves that a persons perception of red is not real, at least not to everyone. Keep this is mind when you make daily assumptions. Sometimes your perceptions are not always the same as others. What may be real to you is not to someone else.
All Things Philosophy
If you are on this page you are either a deep-thinker or you have the curiosity to become a deep thinker. Like you, I am inspired what philosophy has achieved and what it continues to achieve. It inspires people think outside the norm about the semantics in life that many people walk past on a daily basis.
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Omniscient God and Free Will
Free will is having a choice from a set of alternatives in order to independently and freely define ones own future (O’Conner). There is always a first cause and the cause is what determined the effect or consequences. Where Pikes argument comes in is the contradiction between an all-knowing God and the matter of free will (Pike 57-73). Pike (57-53) claims this if God is all knowing he must know our life course from beginning to end. If this is true then all action I am to commit have already been determined and known to be, so how is one to do otherwise (Pike 57-73)? Essentially there are two choices, God is either not all knowing or we are truly aren’t free if our life is already known. Free will is to make spontaneous decisions and not to have a predetermined future.
So if God
knows our life course does that mean it is already determined? We live in a
world of physical laws in which we have no choice but to follow (Sosa). We live
in a world that was created by a cause or the “big bang,” and the Earth is
merely a byproduct of it all (Sosa). Furthermore, we are byproducts of the
Earth. Our lives were created by a cause (physiological forces) and while we
may have the choice to not wake up in the morning or go out for a run, our
choices aren’t determined by free will (Pink), but rather by the
neurological-receptors in our brain (Sosa), for without them we wouldn’t be
capable to make a choice. Our bodies are simply elements of the world put
together as a complex organism.
So if our
bodies are nothing other than byproducts of this world and the things we do are
nothing other than chemical reactions and physiological forces obeying the laws
of physics, than what is the point of living? If there is no such thing as
“free will,” than what is the purpose of what we do? Why do we try so hard to
be successful if it is already determined? These questions are important to humanities
meaning. However people believe in free will not because they are simply
ignorant, but because it gives purpose to life, and without purpose we are
nothing other than an object. A rock (an object) has no purpose other than to
be a rock, but humans’ like to believe that they have a higher purpose
(although rocks an humans are both byproducts of the world) and that we don’t
live by the physiological rules of the world.
The bottom line:
- If God doesn’t know the entire plan of my life, then God is not all knowing (omnicient).
- If God is indeed omniscient (all knowing), he/she will know the entire plan of my life.
- How can I truly act otherwise if my life’s plan is already known?
Works Cited:
O'Conner, Timothy. "Free
Will." 2. 2010. <http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/freewill/>.
Pike, Nelson. Divine
Omniscience and Voluntary Action. 57-73. Web. <http://commonsenseatheism.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Pike-Divine-Omniscience-and-Voluntary-Action.pdf>.
Pink, Thomas, perf. "Thomas
Pink on Free Will." Philosophy Bites. N.p., 09 Mar 2008. web. 3 Apr
2013.
Sosa, David, perf. Waking
Life-Free Will. Dir. Richard Linklater. 2001. Film. 3 Apr 2013.
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=veqkUUOlLLE&feature=player_embedded>.
Morality Without God
A preacher of the Christian faith in many cases make it a point to say that the Bible is the key to living a moral life, when in fact morality and religion have no connection. People do not do what is right and what is wrong because God has told them too, but because morality is based off of the notion of happiness and suffering (Harris). The Bible while many see it as a “perfect guide to morality,” they ignore the more obscene advice such as “whenever children [gets] out of line, we should beat them with a rod (Proverbs 13:24, 20:30, and 23:13–14)” (Harris). Good Christians for example ignore these scriptures and interpret them in a different perspective because they are relatively good people and that the basis of morality doesn’t literally lie within the Bible.
If morality was necessary based off of God then what about different religions? Are they immoral because they do not believe in the same God or are atheist more likely to be immoral than a theist? “According to United Nations’ Human Development Report (2005), the most atheistic societies... [Tend to be] the healthiest, as indicated by measures of life expectancy, adult literacy, per-capita income, educational attainment, gender equality, homicide rate, and infant mortality” (Harris). Most importantly, these facts prove that atheist societies do not need a God to be moral and live in a civilized manner (Harris).
Many churches will preach of the necessity to listen to God's commandments and impose Gods will on our morality, but as seen above not all the Bible can be taken as a guide for morality nor is it necessary to have to believe in a God to be moral. In a sense morality is all relative to a circumstance, but morality shouldn’t be simply based off of opinions, but rather explanations and reasons whether something is moral or not. For example the morality of human murder would need strong justifications to be considered moral, but because murder is always poorly justified it is a mutual societal agreement that ending one life for their own ideology is unacceptable. Instead of God being the guideline for morality one should use reason to seek choices that permit happiness and prohibit suffering rather than the word of God.
Works Cited
Harris, Sam. "The Myth of
Secular Moral Chaos." Council for Secular Humanism. N.p.. Web. 10
Apr 2013. <http://www.secularhumanism.org/index.php?section=library&page=sharris_26_3.
Sinnott, Walter, perf.
"Walter Sinnott-Armstrong on Morality Without God." Philosophy
Bites. N.p., 28 Aug 2009. web. 12 Apr 2013.
Labels:
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Social Contract Theory & the Divine Command Theory
Sometimes the media and people are pessimistic about how society is on a downslope of chaos and hopelessness, but if you look at how far we have come you will begin to understand how grateful we should be to the freedoms we have especially in America. Below is a discussion I had written for my philosophy class on how the United States deviated away from the Divine Command Theory for a more free society and adopted principles from the Social Contract Theory instead. Please feel free to comment if you have alternate perspectives or if you refute anything I have said.
According to Thomas Hobbes the Social Contract Theory starts with the fact that men are “naturally self-interested and rational…to submit to an authority” rather than to live in the “State of Nature” where there is no reasonable guideline of limits for a person to pursue their interests (Friend). Hobbes states that the State of Nature would be “unbearably brutal” because people could then act in extreme ways such as killing another man for his resources or property (Friend). The State of Nature would then “provide no capacity to ensure the long-term satisfaction of [peoples] needs or desires” (Friend). This unpredictable state would make happiness in a society impossible.
Instead Hobbes suggests the Social Contract Theory is the deterrent of such extreme acts and creates guidelines for which people live (Friend). Laws are pointless without authority, and for a civilized society to exist people must conform to the laws in which they reside in order to live a prosperous life (Friend). To live within a civilized society a person becomes limited in which people act to prevent harm to others, and therefore aren’t fully free. Hobbes states that while people have to give up freedom, it is still better than living in a State of Nature, and any rational man would submit to an authority than to live in a state of unpredictable behavior (Friend). The Social Contract Theory is an obligation such as Socrates’ unwillingness to escape prison regardless of his unjust sentencing (Jowett), and instead face the obligations of the Athenian laws which provided him the opportunity his way of living (philosophizing). Socrates saw escaping prison as immoral and rationally inconstant and therefore refused Crito’s offer of escaping prison. Socrates’ obligation to submit to authority is similar to the United States’ constitution and obligations of being a citizen of the United States.
In the United States we follow the Social Contract Theory and resist the Divine Command Theory. Divine Command Theory requires people to practice the same religion and follow the rules of that particular religion as a guideline for a person’s actions (Austin). The Divine Command Theory makes living in a free society like the United States impossible due to the fact that people believe in different religions. Divine Command Theory forces people conform the rule of a particular religion creating problems in a free society (United States) where all religions can be practiced. Different religions would create different rules and beliefs, leading to religious conflict. To prevent these problems the founders of the United States separated church from the state and instead the Constitution symbolizes a neutral social contract derived from the basis of morality and fairness. The federal government then acts as the absolute authority in defending the Constitution or what Hobbes describes as the enforcement mechanism of a social contract.
According to Thomas Hobbes the Social Contract Theory starts with the fact that men are “naturally self-interested and rational…to submit to an authority” rather than to live in the “State of Nature” where there is no reasonable guideline of limits for a person to pursue their interests (Friend). Hobbes states that the State of Nature would be “unbearably brutal” because people could then act in extreme ways such as killing another man for his resources or property (Friend). The State of Nature would then “provide no capacity to ensure the long-term satisfaction of [peoples] needs or desires” (Friend). This unpredictable state would make happiness in a society impossible.
Instead Hobbes suggests the Social Contract Theory is the deterrent of such extreme acts and creates guidelines for which people live (Friend). Laws are pointless without authority, and for a civilized society to exist people must conform to the laws in which they reside in order to live a prosperous life (Friend). To live within a civilized society a person becomes limited in which people act to prevent harm to others, and therefore aren’t fully free. Hobbes states that while people have to give up freedom, it is still better than living in a State of Nature, and any rational man would submit to an authority than to live in a state of unpredictable behavior (Friend). The Social Contract Theory is an obligation such as Socrates’ unwillingness to escape prison regardless of his unjust sentencing (Jowett), and instead face the obligations of the Athenian laws which provided him the opportunity his way of living (philosophizing). Socrates saw escaping prison as immoral and rationally inconstant and therefore refused Crito’s offer of escaping prison. Socrates’ obligation to submit to authority is similar to the United States’ constitution and obligations of being a citizen of the United States.
In the United States we follow the Social Contract Theory and resist the Divine Command Theory. Divine Command Theory requires people to practice the same religion and follow the rules of that particular religion as a guideline for a person’s actions (Austin). The Divine Command Theory makes living in a free society like the United States impossible due to the fact that people believe in different religions. Divine Command Theory forces people conform the rule of a particular religion creating problems in a free society (United States) where all religions can be practiced. Different religions would create different rules and beliefs, leading to religious conflict. To prevent these problems the founders of the United States separated church from the state and instead the Constitution symbolizes a neutral social contract derived from the basis of morality and fairness. The federal government then acts as the absolute authority in defending the Constitution or what Hobbes describes as the enforcement mechanism of a social contract.
Works Cited
Austin, Michael.
"Divine Command Theory." Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
2006. <http://www.iep.utm.edu/divine-c/>.
Friend, Celeste .
"Social Contract Theory." Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
2004 . <http://www.iep.utm.edu/soc-cont/>.
Jowett, Benjamin.
"Crito ." . MIT. Web. 23 Apr 2013.
<http://classics.mit.edu/Plato/crito.html>.
Differentiating an Idea from Reality
Have you ever seen the movie "Inception" starring Leonardo DiCaprio? Well if you haven't, you should. Christopher Nolan, the director, revolved the storyline around dreaming and reality. It reminded me of a paper I had once wrote a few semesters ago about differentiating an idea from reality. What is reality? What is an idea? Are our ideas reality? Well after you read my blog, hopefully it can shed light on what we think reality is. The topic the Professor gave was “If a tree falls in the forest and there's no one around to hear it, does it make a sound?”
Descartes epistemology consisted of differentiating idealism from realism in an effort to point out that our senses are not a reliable source to know what is real and what is not (Skirry). Descartes’s argument stated that since our senses can sometimes deceive us therefore we couldn’t rely on them in any way to understand what reality is. For example, if a person looks up at night they will see stars far away, but “light moves at over 186,000 miles per second,” (speed of light) so if a star is 30 million light years away then, the star that a person may presently see is light from the past. The star therefore is 30 million light years old and may not even exist anymore (Pecorino). Our eyes are nothing but an organ connected to the brain that can see only what is within the limits of the eye itself. Even though we see the light of a star in the sky doesn’t confirm it exist in reality. Therefore Descartes argument is that our senses cannot confirm whether or not something truly exists, but rather can only believe it does. So “If a tree falls in the forest and there's no one around to hear it, does it make a sound?” This essay will engage in this epistemological problem and will differentiate ideas such as sound from reality. Sound is a formulated idea derived from our senses, and while it may be undeniably true that a tree causes sonic wavelengths, the experience of a sound coming from the tree doesn’t exist if there is no perceiver to experience it.
It is important to understand that there is no way of confirming anything we perceive to exist. When Descartes states, “I think therefore I am” he means that that the only way to confirm he exists was because he was thinking (Skirry). Regardless of what he was thinking was true or false was irrelevant to the fact that he was a thinking being (Skirry). Therefore if he is in fact a thinking being then he must have a mind, and if he has a thinking mind, then he must exist. Because if we didn’t have a thinking mind then a person would be nothing other than a carcass. Our mind is what makes us human. Looking in the mirror as everyone in the morning does isn’t enough confirmation for Descartes that we truly exist. Descartes would argue that in a dream (not reality) a person could look in a mirror and see him or herself but it wouldn’t make them real because it is only a dream. When a person looks at themself in a mirror is isn’t the person they see that proves their existence it is that fact that they are thinking and processing what they are seeing. Regardless if what they are seeing is a dream or reality, if they are thinking they exist. Our senses make up the world we know even reality, but to confirm reality Descartes’s claim says we can only confirm that as thinking humans beings we exist, and we can only believe in the external world itself, as we perceive it. So how do we function as humans if we cannot prove the existence of the world?
Humans function off of ideas to make the world around us have meaning, but ultimately to function with the environment around us. According to John Locke’s empiricism there are two types of ideas; one is derived from sensation such as seeing, hearing, touching, tasting, and smelling,” and the other is derived through “reflection” or thinking, doubting, or knowing (Kemerling). The idea of a star in the sky at night is an idea of a sun, which is derived from our sense of sight. The other type of ideas are reflective, such as thinking of how “sweet” candy taste when we eat it, or maybe “doubting” we heard a sound coming from another room on a quiet Halloween night (Kemerling). To break it down even more Locke believed that every idea had primary and secondary qualities. Primary qualities consisted of “intrinsic” ideas such as “bulk, figure, texture, and motion" (Locke). Primary qualities were part of the object itself. For example fuzziness would be a primary quality of a kiwi’s outer skin. A secondary quality would be intangible characteristics such as "colors, sounds, smells, tastes, etc" (Locke). Intangible qualities are ideas of characteristics that are necessary for the object to have, but cannot be used to prove the true existence of something. For example soda may taste sweet and might indicate the presence of sugar, but diet soda also taste sweet and has no sugar, therefore the experience of sweetness while it may be a true experience cannot prove the true existence of sugar in soda. Furthermore, what is true doesn’t necessarily prove existence. It is important as philosophers to understand that that truth does not equal existence especially in regards to qualities of reality. “Everything we know, everything we believe, every thought we can entertain is made up of ideas of sensation and reflection and nothing else” (Kemerling). Our thoughts of reality are simply ideas made up of qualities of what is real, but the truth of reality cannot be confirmed by an idea or the truths of certain qualities. Ideas are what compose every thought that the mind entertains and to function as humans we must trust (or have faith) in the ideas derived from our sensory organs (McCormick) are in fact real. If we cannot accept our ideas or believe in our senses, then the human life and mind would serve no purpose. After all, the mind is nothing without its senses to feed it knowledge.
One problem with Locke’s epistemology is that ideas (representations of intangible and tangible objects) can never be verified. “The notion of representative realism,” was a problem, so Berkeley got rid of substance (objects) and claimed that everything is an idea and ideas exist only in minds, so if everything is an idea then all things that exist, exist only in the mind (Browne). Or in other words “we live in an ideal world or world of ideas” (Browne). Berkeley’s claim relies on the notion that perception of existence are linked, so if an object cannot be perceived then one must conclude that it doesn’t exist based off our inability to perceive it. Berkley’s claim is that we live in an unsubstantial world and for many is hard to believe, but if ideas are all we know then there is no way to know a substantial world. Berkeley states, “to be is to be perceived,” or “existence depends on perception” (Browne). The problem with this is that just because we are not capable to perceive an object one moment and turn around and not perceive an object doesn’t mean it no longer exist. Or does it? For example if there is a newly planted tree outside and we leave it for a year and come back we will see it has grown and therefore conclude that although we couldn’t perceive it with our eyes, it still in fact exists.
Immanuel Kant argues that our knowledge itself is not perfect, and that human knowledge is limited by the physiology of our sensory organs (McCormick). Kant states that there are physiological rules associated with our physical body and reality can only be perceived only in the manner in which our body is capable of perceiving it (McCormick). For example, there are many types of different sound waves, but the human body can only experience or hear certain frequencies, therefore leaving many other frequencies unknown to the naked ear. Humans live in a world of laws and limitations making our knowledge limited, such as not knowing whether or not a star exists at a particular moment in which we see proves that there is a limitation of our eyesight. Kant challenged the rationalist way of thinking as well as the empiricist; instead he believes that the mind conforms to true reality by yielding to the rules (laws of physics) that govern it. This makes certain parts of reality unperceivable and therefore unknowable (McCormick).
So the question is, “If a tree falls in the forest and there's no one around to hear it, does it make a sound?” To answer this question it first must be broken down into different questions. We all as humans can think of a sound of a branch breaking and can also imagine the sound of a tree snapping in half or falling over, but if there was no body around to hear a tree fall over would it make a sound? Well according to Kant the laws of physics (and laws of the physiological body) would say the snapping of a tree would cause sonic wavelengths in the air that are perceivable to the human ear and therefore a sound would occur. On the other hand John Locke would ask Kant well what is a sound? The sound of a tree falling is intangible and is what Locke would call a secondary quality derived from our sense of hearing to understand the object or tree in motion crashing to the ground. If a sound is a quality it must also be an idea, and if a sound is an idea then there must be a person to experience or entertain the idea or sound of the tree falling over (Browne). The real question is there a person to experience the tree making a sound? If a person was present to hear the sonic wavelengths of a tree falling then the idea of the sound (quality) exists, and therefore it would make a sound. If there was no person there, to hear the sound (idea), it would never exist, and therefore the tree would make sonic wavelengths but not a sound (Browne). Berkeley epistemology states that there must me a perceiver for something to exist, and the only other the tree could have made a sound without a person is a for there to be some sort of universal perceiver (God) (Browne).
It is important as philosophers to able to differentiate an idea from reality. An idea is tool only to a mind, just as the mind is a tool to understanding reality. An idea is a product of our senses, which is defined and limited by the physiology of our body and of physics of the world and universe in which we live. John Locke’s empiricism stated that our minds are created as a clean slate and reality fills our mind with ideas that eventually make up our knowledge (Kemerling). All the sensory-data is perceived through our senses, which then conform to reality in the form of ideas or reflections of the world (McCormick). According to Descartes our minds consist of intangible perceptions of the outside world, and there is no way to confirm the reality of the outside would but only differentiating what is unreal (our ideas) from what truly exist in reality (the universe). Conversely it is important to understand the importance of our senses because without them we would not be able to attain knowledge from the external world and without knowledge our minds would be a clean slate indefinitely making our humans unthinkable and therefore non-existant.
Differentiating an Idea from Reality
Descartes epistemology consisted of differentiating idealism from realism in an effort to point out that our senses are not a reliable source to know what is real and what is not (Skirry). Descartes’s argument stated that since our senses can sometimes deceive us therefore we couldn’t rely on them in any way to understand what reality is. For example, if a person looks up at night they will see stars far away, but “light moves at over 186,000 miles per second,” (speed of light) so if a star is 30 million light years away then, the star that a person may presently see is light from the past. The star therefore is 30 million light years old and may not even exist anymore (Pecorino). Our eyes are nothing but an organ connected to the brain that can see only what is within the limits of the eye itself. Even though we see the light of a star in the sky doesn’t confirm it exist in reality. Therefore Descartes argument is that our senses cannot confirm whether or not something truly exists, but rather can only believe it does. So “If a tree falls in the forest and there's no one around to hear it, does it make a sound?” This essay will engage in this epistemological problem and will differentiate ideas such as sound from reality. Sound is a formulated idea derived from our senses, and while it may be undeniably true that a tree causes sonic wavelengths, the experience of a sound coming from the tree doesn’t exist if there is no perceiver to experience it.
It is important to understand that there is no way of confirming anything we perceive to exist. When Descartes states, “I think therefore I am” he means that that the only way to confirm he exists was because he was thinking (Skirry). Regardless of what he was thinking was true or false was irrelevant to the fact that he was a thinking being (Skirry). Therefore if he is in fact a thinking being then he must have a mind, and if he has a thinking mind, then he must exist. Because if we didn’t have a thinking mind then a person would be nothing other than a carcass. Our mind is what makes us human. Looking in the mirror as everyone in the morning does isn’t enough confirmation for Descartes that we truly exist. Descartes would argue that in a dream (not reality) a person could look in a mirror and see him or herself but it wouldn’t make them real because it is only a dream. When a person looks at themself in a mirror is isn’t the person they see that proves their existence it is that fact that they are thinking and processing what they are seeing. Regardless if what they are seeing is a dream or reality, if they are thinking they exist. Our senses make up the world we know even reality, but to confirm reality Descartes’s claim says we can only confirm that as thinking humans beings we exist, and we can only believe in the external world itself, as we perceive it. So how do we function as humans if we cannot prove the existence of the world?
Humans function off of ideas to make the world around us have meaning, but ultimately to function with the environment around us. According to John Locke’s empiricism there are two types of ideas; one is derived from sensation such as seeing, hearing, touching, tasting, and smelling,” and the other is derived through “reflection” or thinking, doubting, or knowing (Kemerling). The idea of a star in the sky at night is an idea of a sun, which is derived from our sense of sight. The other type of ideas are reflective, such as thinking of how “sweet” candy taste when we eat it, or maybe “doubting” we heard a sound coming from another room on a quiet Halloween night (Kemerling). To break it down even more Locke believed that every idea had primary and secondary qualities. Primary qualities consisted of “intrinsic” ideas such as “bulk, figure, texture, and motion" (Locke). Primary qualities were part of the object itself. For example fuzziness would be a primary quality of a kiwi’s outer skin. A secondary quality would be intangible characteristics such as "colors, sounds, smells, tastes, etc" (Locke). Intangible qualities are ideas of characteristics that are necessary for the object to have, but cannot be used to prove the true existence of something. For example soda may taste sweet and might indicate the presence of sugar, but diet soda also taste sweet and has no sugar, therefore the experience of sweetness while it may be a true experience cannot prove the true existence of sugar in soda. Furthermore, what is true doesn’t necessarily prove existence. It is important as philosophers to understand that that truth does not equal existence especially in regards to qualities of reality. “Everything we know, everything we believe, every thought we can entertain is made up of ideas of sensation and reflection and nothing else” (Kemerling). Our thoughts of reality are simply ideas made up of qualities of what is real, but the truth of reality cannot be confirmed by an idea or the truths of certain qualities. Ideas are what compose every thought that the mind entertains and to function as humans we must trust (or have faith) in the ideas derived from our sensory organs (McCormick) are in fact real. If we cannot accept our ideas or believe in our senses, then the human life and mind would serve no purpose. After all, the mind is nothing without its senses to feed it knowledge.
One problem with Locke’s epistemology is that ideas (representations of intangible and tangible objects) can never be verified. “The notion of representative realism,” was a problem, so Berkeley got rid of substance (objects) and claimed that everything is an idea and ideas exist only in minds, so if everything is an idea then all things that exist, exist only in the mind (Browne). Or in other words “we live in an ideal world or world of ideas” (Browne). Berkeley’s claim relies on the notion that perception of existence are linked, so if an object cannot be perceived then one must conclude that it doesn’t exist based off our inability to perceive it. Berkley’s claim is that we live in an unsubstantial world and for many is hard to believe, but if ideas are all we know then there is no way to know a substantial world. Berkeley states, “to be is to be perceived,” or “existence depends on perception” (Browne). The problem with this is that just because we are not capable to perceive an object one moment and turn around and not perceive an object doesn’t mean it no longer exist. Or does it? For example if there is a newly planted tree outside and we leave it for a year and come back we will see it has grown and therefore conclude that although we couldn’t perceive it with our eyes, it still in fact exists.
Immanuel Kant argues that our knowledge itself is not perfect, and that human knowledge is limited by the physiology of our sensory organs (McCormick). Kant states that there are physiological rules associated with our physical body and reality can only be perceived only in the manner in which our body is capable of perceiving it (McCormick). For example, there are many types of different sound waves, but the human body can only experience or hear certain frequencies, therefore leaving many other frequencies unknown to the naked ear. Humans live in a world of laws and limitations making our knowledge limited, such as not knowing whether or not a star exists at a particular moment in which we see proves that there is a limitation of our eyesight. Kant challenged the rationalist way of thinking as well as the empiricist; instead he believes that the mind conforms to true reality by yielding to the rules (laws of physics) that govern it. This makes certain parts of reality unperceivable and therefore unknowable (McCormick).
So the question is, “If a tree falls in the forest and there's no one around to hear it, does it make a sound?” To answer this question it first must be broken down into different questions. We all as humans can think of a sound of a branch breaking and can also imagine the sound of a tree snapping in half or falling over, but if there was no body around to hear a tree fall over would it make a sound? Well according to Kant the laws of physics (and laws of the physiological body) would say the snapping of a tree would cause sonic wavelengths in the air that are perceivable to the human ear and therefore a sound would occur. On the other hand John Locke would ask Kant well what is a sound? The sound of a tree falling is intangible and is what Locke would call a secondary quality derived from our sense of hearing to understand the object or tree in motion crashing to the ground. If a sound is a quality it must also be an idea, and if a sound is an idea then there must be a person to experience or entertain the idea or sound of the tree falling over (Browne). The real question is there a person to experience the tree making a sound? If a person was present to hear the sonic wavelengths of a tree falling then the idea of the sound (quality) exists, and therefore it would make a sound. If there was no person there, to hear the sound (idea), it would never exist, and therefore the tree would make sonic wavelengths but not a sound (Browne). Berkeley epistemology states that there must me a perceiver for something to exist, and the only other the tree could have made a sound without a person is a for there to be some sort of universal perceiver (God) (Browne).
It is important as philosophers to able to differentiate an idea from reality. An idea is tool only to a mind, just as the mind is a tool to understanding reality. An idea is a product of our senses, which is defined and limited by the physiology of our body and of physics of the world and universe in which we live. John Locke’s empiricism stated that our minds are created as a clean slate and reality fills our mind with ideas that eventually make up our knowledge (Kemerling). All the sensory-data is perceived through our senses, which then conform to reality in the form of ideas or reflections of the world (McCormick). According to Descartes our minds consist of intangible perceptions of the outside world, and there is no way to confirm the reality of the outside would but only differentiating what is unreal (our ideas) from what truly exist in reality (the universe). Conversely it is important to understand the importance of our senses because without them we would not be able to attain knowledge from the external world and without knowledge our minds would be a clean slate indefinitely making our humans unthinkable and therefore non-existant.
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