This Sunday we are discussing Perception.
A rather old topic in philosophy but maybe also one with opportunities.
In the meantime Edwin kindly sent me this story which is very topical 
today given the British elections. But if you think you know the story, 
think again. I must also thank Edwin for inspiring the conclusion of my 
essay.
Sure this will find good homes given the British Elections
Ed
?
While walking down the street one day a "Member of Parliament" is 
tragically hit by a truck and dies.
His soul arrives in heaven and is met by St. Peter at the entrance.
'Welcome to heaven,' says St. Peter.. 'Before you settle in, it seems 
there is a problem. We seldom see a high official around these parts, 
you see, so we're not sure what to do with you.'
'No problem, just let me in,' says the man.
'Well, I'd like to, but I have orders from higher up. What we'll do is 
have you spend one day in hell and one in heaven. Then you can choose 
where to spend eternity.'
'Really, I've made up my mind. I want to be in heaven,' says the MP. 
'I'm sorry, but we have our rules.'
And with that, St. Peter escorts him to the elevator and he goes down, 
down, down to hell. The doors open and he finds himself in the middle of 
a green golf course. In the distance is a clubhouse and standing in 
front of it are all his friends and other politicians who had worked 
with him.
Everyone is very happy and in evening dress. They run to greet him, 
shake his hand, and reminisce about the good times they had while 
getting rich at the expense of the people. They play a friendly game of 
golf and then dine on lobster, caviar and champagne.
Also present is the devil, who really is a very friendly & nice guy who 
has a good time dancing and telling jokes. They are having such a good 
time that before he realizes it, it is time to go.
Everyone gives him a hearty farewell and waves while the elevator 
rises....The elevator goes up, up, up and the door reopens on heaven 
where St. Peter is waiting for him. 'Now it's time to visit heaven.'
So, 24 hours pass with the MP joining a group of contented souls moving 
from cloud to cloud, playing the harp and singing. They have a good time 
and, before he realizes it, the 24 hours have gone by and St. Peter returns.
'Well, then, you've spent a day in hell and another in heaven. Now 
choose your eternity.'
The MP reflects for a minute, then he answers: 'Well, I would never have 
said it before, I mean heaven has been delightful, but I think I would 
be better off in hell.'
So St. Peter escorts him to the elevator and he goes down, down, down to 
hell. Now the doors of the elevator open and he's in the middle of a 
barren land covered with waste and garbage. He sees all his friends, 
dressed in rags, picking up the trash and putting it in black bags as 
more trash falls from above.
The devil comes over to him and puts his arm around his shoulder.
'I don't understand,' stammers the MP. 'Yesterday I was here and there 
was a golf course and clubhouse, and we ate lobster and caviar, drank 
champagne, and danced and had a great time.. Now there's just a 
wasteland full of garbage and my friends look miserable. What happened?'
The devil looks at him, smiles and says, 'Yesterday we were 
campaigning... ………… Today you voted.'
All the best
====================
All the best
Lawrence
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Perception
The subject of perception is not only important in philosophy but also 
an issue that has been discussed for many centuries. Indeed, anyone who 
is remotely interested in the human beings have been and are 
investigating the issue of perception; I'm thinking of psychologists, 
neurologists, biologists, philosophers, and so on.
It would, therefore, be very difficult for me to say anything new on the 
subject and to say anything remotely relevant would probably take years, 
and even then..! So, the first place to investigate perception would, of 
course, start in such places as Google, Wikipedia, and the Stanford 
Encyclopedia of Philosophy to mention just a few sources.
In the meantime I would like to share some ideas with you on perception 
specifically on two issues: 1) why is perception such an important 
issue? And 2) what are the consequences of language on perception?
What everyone seems to agree on about perception is that by perception 
we are generally thinking of relationship with the real world (reality) 
as opposed to our relationship with our body. And a second accepted 
claim about perception is the issue of how the information we receive 
through the senses, coupled with what we have already experienced, is 
interpreted to arrive at an idea of what the world outside is like. 
Needless to say there are better ways of describing the situation but 
this will do for now.
The first problem of perception, and I am only giving a rough and ready 
description of the problem here, is how can we be sure that what we are 
perceiving with our senses is indeed what the world is really like? This 
is usually called the epistemological problem of perception. How do we 
know that what we claim to be reality is indeed reality? In the Stanford 
Encyclopedia of Philosophy there is also another essay with the title 
"The problem of Perception" and this refers to the problem of how can we 
distinguish between say hallucination or illusion from perceptions of 
the real world.
Let us stick to reality, the problem we are facing is in effect the same 
type of problem we face when considering whether the glass is half full 
or half empty (Wikipedia: Perception). But isn't it ironic that an 
intellectual investigation of perception leads to different 
interpretations (question of epistemology or illusion) , different 
methodologies of investigation (philosophy, cognitive science, 
neurology, psychology etc) and different emphasis on what is relevant 
(sense data, language, experience, beliefs etc).
And of course the problem is that even if we can agree on how we can get 
from sense perception to a reliable vision of the world, we still have 
the problem that some people think that the glass is half full and some 
will say that the glass is half empty. Many would attribute the 
discrepancy to our past experiences and our accumulation of knowledge 
about the world around us.
But investigations on perception seem to focus, more or less, up to the 
point where we come up, in our mind (I prefer brain) of what we take to 
be reality. In other words, perception stops at the point at which we 
claim the glass is half full (or half empty).
But the question we are not asking about perception is precisely what's 
the point of having perception? Of course the logical answer would be to 
have an idea of what the real world is like. But the only reason why we 
would want to have perception of the real world is not to accumulate 
knowledge of the real world, but rather to interact with the real world.
In a way perception is not like stamp collecting, where we amass 
different examples of the state of the world, but more like a Turing 
Test Machine where what matters is the answer that we are given after 
having asked the question.
Consider, this mental experiment. Assuming we have two Turning Machines 
and both are made of identical cogs and wheels and we ask each whether 
the glass is half full or half empty. Now one machine comes back to us 
with half full and the other, as you have guessed, says half empty. One 
thing is for sure, we don't know what is the state of the glass, or 
rather we have no reason to accept one answer and not the other.
Now consider this other experiment, two machines and the same question, 
but one machine is made up of cogs and wheels and the other light 
crystals (or worms for that matter). We ask the question and both 
machines come back to us with the same answer, for example that the 
glass is half full (it does not matter which). Wouldn't we be more than 
justified to accept that the answer to the glass question is precisely 
that it is half full? Don't forget that in a real Turing Test Machine we 
won't be allowed to look underneath the bonnet. As far as we are 
concerned both are Turing Test Machines.
The point I wish to make about these two mental experiments is that 
consistency is more relevant than methodology. What is more important 
for us is that we always arrive at the same answer irrespective of the 
machine and not that the same machine always gives the same answer. But 
before you think I have lost my marbles, let me clarify, we certainly 
want a machine to give the same consistent answer, but it gives the same 
consistent answer because other independent machines working under 
different conditions always give the same consistent answer.
Which of course, immediately leads us to the problem of induction, we 
can confirm (or refute a hypothesis) by looking at a large number of 
independent examples of what we want to show, we can then accept or 
refute the hypothesis depending on how many independent examples we come 
across of the same kind.
This type of consistency, has a drawback since there might always be an 
example that might be different from the rest. But we can deal much 
better, and feel more comfortable, with counting a hundred different 
swans that have all been white, but swan number 101 is black, than 
counting swan number one 101 times, and discover that each time we 
counted the swan it was white so we conclude that all swans are white.
What does all this have to do with perception? The point is precisely 
not that our senses, our experiences and our knowledge always give us 
the same perception of reality, but rather given that our senses, our 
experiences and our knowledge are all different, we still come up with 
the same perception of reality.
To put this idea into practice, if 1000000 free and independent people, 
who do not know each other, claim that women and men are to be treated 
equally in a society they must have perceived reality much better than 
say one person claiming a million times that men ought to be treated 
better than women (or vice versa).
But this is not falling into an utilitarian trap by simply looking at 
the numbers. Indeed utilitarianism does look at the numbers, but that is 
all it does. Whereas what I am claiming is that each count is arrived at 
by independent means. Utilitarianism assumes that each of the majority 
are equal, but I am suggest that each one of those taking part in the 
calculation are unique and independent of each other and still arrive at 
the same conclusion. In other words, what matters is not what you are 
but who you are: and we are all human beings and not a mass produced 
machine.
Thus perception can lead to reality not because we all process sense 
data in the same way, but rather given that we most probably all process 
sense data in different ways and despite using the same machine (the 
brain), what matters is whether we all come to the same conclusion 
independently of each other.
So why don't we always all end up with the same interpretation of 
reality? Of course we might not always be looking at the same reality: 
some people might be looking at the sun and some at the moon. By 
definition they will never have the same opinion of what is reality. But 
as long as everyone is making, in a way, an independent but honest 
subjective judgement, we might more likely reach the same conclusion 
than if we had some hidden agenda. Of course, if everyone looked at the 
same direction it would be very helpful. But there is nothing new in 
this idea anyway.
Even if independent consistency can dispel some of the problems of 
perception we still haven't really answered the question: why do we have 
perception in the first place? But we already know the answer to this 
question, i.e. to guide our actions.
The point of wanting to know whether the glass is half full or half 
empty is to know whether there is enough water in it to quench our 
thirst or do we have to go to the fridge to get some more water. In 
other words, perception is relevant because it is causally linked to our 
actions. The problem of perception is indeed a problem of action.
How we act, in a way, matters more than how we perceive. When we are 
perceiving we are inert and we are certainly not in a dynamic state with 
our environment. However, when we act not only are we in a dynamic state 
with our environment, but most probably affect other people and how they 
perceive their real world. But action is not to be interpreted as 
behaviourism nor instinctive reaction. Of course, in every day language 
we do speak of behaving, for example behaving badly with guests, or 
instinctively for example he instinctively shot the ball into the net. 
Although there is an element of implied meaning of automata or physical 
movement we do not, even in every day language, exclude intention when 
we use behaviour or instinct.
The point about action is that we always attribute intention to our 
actions, whereas when we speak of behaviour or instinct we are really 
describing what happens precisely because we intentionally want to 
exclude intention. You will recall Wittgenstein's question on the point, 
what is the difference between raising my arm, and my arm rising?
But if reality for us is more or less what we all independently but 
consistently perceive to be the case, wouldn't it follow that action is 
what we all consistently and independently do given a certain type of 
perception?
So far there are two major objections to my arguments above. The first 
is that just because we are independent and consistent about what we 
perceive to be reality it does not automatically follow that what we 
perceive as reality is indeed the correct view. We might all constantly 
and independently look at the sun and come to the conclusion that what 
we see is a football size ball of fire a few meters above our head. And 
we can all consistently believe that we should torture our enemies. But 
maybe the problem here is not with the philosophy itself but a problem 
inherent in the agents philosophising. In other words problems about 
true and good originate from the way we are built and not necessarily 
the way we function. In any case, as I suggested we can deal much better 
with honest mistakes than with manipulated falsehoods.
The other issue is of course, there is no reason to suppose that one 
person's opinion cannot be the correct representation of reality even 
when everyone else consistently thinks that something else is reality. 
Maybe this is less of an objection since there is not reason why someone 
cannot be right and all others wrong. And assuming the condition of 
independent and honest subjective reporting sooner or later many other 
people will come to the same conclusion. In fact this issue seems to 
suggest that our state of knowledge has more to do with perception that 
the senses themselves. Although of course we would want both to be 
performing at an optimal level.
Which of course brings me to the issue of language in perception. One of 
the traditional questions about language and perception has been whether 
language affects the way we perceive the world around us.
However, as I have tried to argue, although how we interpret information 
from our senses and how we arrive at a view of the world are interesting 
and important, the real philosophical issues are more relevant when we 
consider what to do with our perceptions. In other words, the 
interesting philosophical issues have more to do with the output end of 
the process than the input stage of perception.
And language is a key factor in perception because language is a key 
tool we have to interact with our environment or rather other human 
beings. We really have two options if we want to influence what someone 
else does. Physically get hold of them and physically force them to do 
what we want or communicate with them using language.
So for me the key issue is not whether language affects our perception, 
but rather how our language affects the perception of others. We mustn't 
forget that my language is someone else's sense perception and someone 
else's language is part of our sense perception.
Moreover, and this is the key issue, the language we use with others (or 
don't use) directly affects the way we act. Consider these two 
situations which many of us have found ourselves in quite often; which 
of them reflects reality vis-a-vie how we act:
We enter a shop, see a bottle of perfume, without a price label, and 
utter to ourselves the words "look a cheap bottle of perfume, let me buy 
it." Or we enter the same shop see the same bottle of perfume with a 
label on it giving the price and "20% discount" in big print, and utter 
the works "look a cheap bottle of perfume let me buy it." Speaking for 
myself if I see a bottle of perfume without a price label on it I will 
never utter the words, "look a cheap bottle of perfume let me buy it". 
Depending on how annoyed I am, I am more likely to say something like 
"I'm so sorry but I certainly won't be buying that bottle of perfume you 
are displaying on the shelves without a price on it and hoping against 
all odds that I will buy it!" Of course, in real life I will use more 
efficient language to express my thoughts, but leave you to imagine the 
words, in the meantime I will only admit in public to using the sentence 
I gave you. If I am not too annoyed and desperately need to buy that 
bottle of perfume I might ask what the price was.
Indeed language does play a pivotal role in perception, but I am not 
convinced that the real issue is how does my language affect my 
perception. The key role of language in perception is precisely how the 
language of others affects our perception and how our language affects 
the perception of others.
If it is our language that affects how we perceive our reality we 
probably would not have cheats, charlatans and corrupt politicians in 
our mist. After a care search, I cannot find anything is my language or 
perceptions that says "vote for the politician who offers you a rose 
garden."
Take care
Lawrence
from Lawrence, Pub Philosophy Group, Sunday meeting: Perception
 
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