GE Morton wrote: ↑February 25th, 2020, 11:06 pm
No. Only evidence for the existence of certain classes of things is sensory phenomena (which is what I think you mean by "phenomenal occurrences").
As always, a pet peeve is when people parse the world as if it "revolves around us." "Phenomenal occurrences" isn't necessarily referring to us.
Different sorts of evidence are germane to other classes of things. For example, a valid proof is evidence that a that a largest prime does not exist;
Mathematics is just a way of thinking about (quantificational) relations. Mathematical objects do not exist period.
your ability to state what you ate for breakfast is evidence that memory exists; that a mother sacrifices herself to save her child is evidence that love exists; that some new way of doing something proves superior to previous methods is evidence that ideas exist; that you hand me the salt shaker in response to my request, "Please pass the salt," is evidence that meanings (for words) exist and that we both know what they are for those words. I.e., we don't confirm the existence of love, ideas, meanings, mathematical entities, by looking at them or touching them.
Mental events or processes are phenomenal occurrences, too. Memory, love, ideas, value assessments (including an assessment that something is superior), meanings, are all mental events/processes.
Also, behavior is never the same as mental events or processes. Behavior--which is a phenomenal occurrence--is often taken as evidence of particular mental events or processes, but behavior is never the SAME as those mental events or processes. ("Behavior" here referring to publicly observable phenomena by other humans). It's just like this text appearing on your screen is evidence of the software running your computer, but it's not identical to the software running your computer (and neither would be the software "code"-as-text--that by itself can't run the computer. What runs the computer is electrical processes on the circuit board, etc.)
LOL. What do you think "something mobile living in the forest" is, other than an explanation for your sensory experience provided by our common conceptual scheme? Every concrete entity you name, and exalt as paradigms of "reality," are constructs invented to explain, to render coherent, an otherwise chaotic kaleidoscope of sensory impressions. (Highly useful constructs, but constructs nonetheless).
It's hilarious that you wrote this right after I said, "A normal lame objection to comments like I just made is to point out that I'm describing the phenomenal occurrence in conceptual terms, etc." But there you went ahead with it anyway.
It's not a matter of typing or articulating. You can make no sense of sensory impressions without a conceptual scheme.
That's not at all the case. A large percentage of my perceptual awareness has nothing at all to do with assigning concepts to anything.
Maybe your mind works very differently than mine does, though.