RJG wrote: ↑July 28th, 2018, 12:03 pmYes I agree with you, sorry if my phrasing implied otherwise.Gertie wrote:In my model of the 'world out there' there are other people who seem much like me. And our models are remarkably consistent. This forms our Shared Model. And when I ask you if you see a green apple, and you say yes, we can agree to say it's true - objectively. By which we mean we've compared notes, and they tally. And if I ask a hundred other people, and only one disagrees, then we might wonder if the problem lies with the one person disagreeing, than with our Shared Model, and check that out.All good stuff Gertie, though here (in this paragraph) you seem to suggest that there is such a thing as a "shared model"; one that is on par with "your model" (perception) of the world.
If you have the perception of a green apple on the table, and you have the perception of 100 people all telling you that they also perceive the green apple on the table, then these are both still just your perception, not a "shared" perception (or model). A shared perception implies all these people (which you 'perceive') are 'real', and share the same perception, when in fact, all these people are merely only just figments within your perception.
Claiming that our perceptions are of 'real' things because our 'perceptions' tell us so, is non-sensical; (not logically sound). Example: the ghost that I experienced last night told me he was really real, therefore the ghost must be real -- is not logically sound, nor rationally valid.
Perceptions cannot logically vouch for themselves!
What I'm calling our 'Shared Model' (rather than 'objective reality') of the universe is nested within the caveats you mention. Of course every individual's model is unique, but there is enough crossover imo to talk about a Shared Model of the universe (so for example we can coherently communicate about 'green' 'apples' and 'seeing' and 'pointing', etc), and within that shared model lies notions of subjective opinion and objective/testable/empirical facts.