GaryLouisSmith wrote: ↑September 1st, 2019, 11:00 pmI wrote a reply and pressed submit and then it seems to have disappeared. In that reply I attacked the idea that perception was about sensations.
Sensory perception is not about sensations in the sense that its intentional objects are not sensations.
GaryLouisSmith wrote: ↑September 1st, 2019, 11:00 pmI mentioned that I perceive that there is a bare particular that exemplifies the form of Bed.
A particular exemplifying a form is no longer "bare".
GaryLouisSmith wrote: ↑September 1st, 2019, 11:00 pmI perceive that my bed is next to the window. That it has been slept in. That it as a bed it is a piece of furniture. Sensations are a tiny part of what I perceive. Btw, I have no problem grasping the redness of the sheets on my bed. I really don't believe in sense-data or sensa. My sheets are red. I can directly grasp the sheetness and the redness in addition to the fact that my sheets are red. Ok, I'm going to push submit again. Here goes.
There's a distinction between perceiving things or events, and perceiving states of affairs or facts. You cannot see
that p unless you have p-related visual sensations. And there's a difference between
directly seeing that p and
indirectly seeing that p by
inferring p from directly seeing that q. For example, you can directly see that there is a bed in the room; but you cannot directly, non-inferentially see that it has been slept in.
By the way, I'm using "sensation", "sense-datum", and "sensum" synonymously; and by the latter two terms I don't mean mental
objects as postulated by the classical sense-data theory.