The question of direct or naïve realism, as opposed to indirect or representational realism, arises in the philosophy of perception and of mind out of the debate over the nature of conscious experience; the epistemological
question of whether the world we see around us is the real world itself
or merely an internal perceptual copy of that world generated by neural processes in our brain. Naïve realism is known as direct realism when developed to counter indirect or representative realism, also known as epistemological dualism, the philosophical position that our conscious experience is not of the real world itself but of an internal representation, a miniature virtual-reality replica of the world.
Indirect realism is broadly equivalent to the accepted view of perception
in natural science that states that we do not and cannot perceive the
external world as it really is but know only our ideas and
interpretations of the way the world is. Representationalism is one of the key assumptions of cognitivism in psychology.
The representational realist would deny that "first-hand knowledge" is a
coherent concept, since knowledge is always via some means. Our ideas
of the world are interpretations of sensory input derived from an
external world that is real (unlike the standpoint of idealism, which holds that only ideas are real, but mind-independent things are not).
The main alternative to representationalism is anti-representationalism, the view according to which perception is not a process of constructing internal representations.
History
Aristotle was the first to provide a description of direct realism. In On the Soul he describes how a see-er is informed of the object itself by way of the hylomorphic form carried over the intervening material continuum with which the eye is impressed.
Indirect realism was popular with several early modern philosophers, including René Descartes, John Locke, G. W. Leibniz, George Berkeley, and David Hume.
Locke categorized qualities as follows:
- Primary qualities are qualities which are "explanatorily basic" – which is to say, they can be referred to as the explanation for other qualities or phenomena without requiring explanation themselves – and they are distinct in that our sensory experience of them resembles them in reality. (For example, one perceives an object as spherical precisely because of the way the atoms of the sphere are arranged.) Primary qualities cannot be removed by either thought or physical action, and include mass, movement, and, controversially, solidity (although later proponents of the distinction between primary and secondary qualities usually discount solidity).
- Secondary qualities are qualities which one's experience does not directly resemble; for example, when one sees an object as red, the sensation of seeing redness is not produced by some quality of redness in the object, but by the arrangement of atoms on the surface of the object which reflects and absorbs light in a particular way. Secondary qualities include colour, smell, and taste.
Thomas Reid, a notable member of the Scottish common sense realism was proponent of direct realism. Direct realist views have been attributed to Baruch Spinoza. Immanuel Kant's empirical realism has also been interpreted as a form of direct realism.
Late modern philosophers, J. G. Fichte and G. W. F. Hegel followed Kant in adopting empirical realism. Gottlob Frege (in his paper "Über Sinn und Bedeutung") also subscribed to indirect realism.
In contemporary philosophy, indirect realism has been defended by Edmund Husserl and Bertrand Russell Direct realism has been defended by Hilary Putnam, John McDowell, Galen Strawson, and John R. Searle.
However, epistemological dualism has come under sustained attack by other contemporary philosophers, such as Ludwig Wittgenstein (the private language argument) and Wilfrid Sellars in his seminal essay "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind". Indirect realism is argued to be problematical because of Ryle's regress and the homunculus argument.
However, recently reliance on the private language argument and the
Homunculus Objection has itself come under attack. It can be argued that
those who argue for "inner presence", to use Antti Revonsuo's term, are not proposing a private "referent", with the application of language to it being "private" and thus unshareable, but a private use of public
language. There is no doubt that each of us has a private
understanding of public language, a notion that has been experimentally
supported; George Steiner refers to our personal use of language as an "idiolect", one particular to ourselves in its detail.
The question has to be put how a collective use of language can go on
when, not only do we have differing understandings of the words we use,
but our sensory registrations differ.
Arguments against direct realism
The argument from illusion
This argument was "first offered in a more or less fully explicit form in Berkeley (1713)." It is also referred to as the problem of conflicting appearances (e.g. Myles Burnyeat's article Conflicting Appearances). It has been argued that "informed commonsense" indicates that perceptions often depend on organs of perception.
For example, humans would receive visual information very differently
if they, like flies, had compound eyes, and may not even be able to
imagine how things would appear with entirely different sense organs
such as infra-red detectors or echo-location devices. Furthermore, perception systems can misrepresent objects even when in full working order, as shown, for example, by optical illusions like the Müller-Lyer illusion.
More dramatically, sometimes people perceive things which are not there
at all, which can be termed instances of "hallucination" or "perceptual
delusion".
The argument from illusion allegedly shows the need to posit sense-data as the immediate objects of perception. In cases of illusion or hallucination, the object has qualities that no public physical object in that situation has and so must be distinct from any such object.
Naïve realism may accommodate these facts as they stand by virtue of
its very vagueness (or "open-texture"): it is not specific or detailed
enough to be refuted by such cases.
A more developed direct realist might respond by showing that various
cases of misperception, failed perception, and perceptual relativity do
not make it necessary to suppose that sense-data exist. When a stick
submerged in water looks bent a direct realist is not compelled to say
the stick actually is bent but can say that the stick can have more than
one appearance: a straight stick can look bent when light reflected
from the stick arrives at one's eye in a crooked pattern, but this
appearance is not necessarily a sense-datum in the mind. Similar things
can be said about the coin which appears circular from one vantage point
and oval-shaped from another. Pressing on your eyeball with a finger
creates double vision but assuming the existence of two sense-data is
unnecessary: the direct realist can say that they have two eyes, each
giving them a different view of the world. Usually the eyes are focused
in the same direction; but sometimes they are not.
However, this response is presumably based on previously observed
data. If one were to be able to observe nothing other than the stick in
the water, with no previous information, it would appear that the stick
was bent. Visual depth in particular is a set of inferences, not an
actual experience of the space between things in a radial direction
outward from the observation point. If all empirical evidence
is based upon observation then the entire developed memory and
knowledge of every perception and of each sense may be as skewed as the
bent stick. Since objects with different qualities are experienced from
each of the different perspectives there is no apparent experiential
basis for regarding one out of any such set of related perceptual
experiences as the one in which the relevant physical object is itself
immediately experienced. The most reasonable conclusion is that the
experienced object is always distinct from the physical object or at
least that there is no way to identify which, if any, of the immediately
experienced objects is the physical object itself. Epistemologically it
is as though physical objects were never given, whether or not that is
in fact the case.
Another potential counter-example involves vivid hallucinations:
phantom elephants, for instance, might be interpreted as sense-data. A
direct realist response would differentiate hallucination from genuine
perception: no perception of elephants is going on, only the different
and related mental process of hallucination. However, if there are
visual images when we hallucinate it seems reasonable that there are
visual images when we see. Similarly if dreaming involves visual and
auditory images in our minds it seems reasonable to think there are
visual and auditory images, or sense-data, when we are awake and
perceiving things. This argument has been challenged in a number of
different ways. First it has been questioned whether there must be some
object present that actually has the experienced qualities, which would
then seemingly have to be something like a sense-datum. Why couldn't it
be that the perceiver is simply in a state of seeming to experience such
an object without any object actually being present? Second, in cases
of illusion and perceptual relativity there is an object present which
is simply misperceived, usually in readily explainable ways, and no need
to suppose that an additional object is also involved. Third, the last
part of the perceptual relativity version of the argument has been
challenged by questioning whether there is really no experiential
difference between veridical and non-veridical perception; and by
arguing that even if sense-data are experienced in non-veridical cases
and even if the difference between veridical and non-veridical cases is,
as claimed, experientially indiscernible, there is still no reason to
think that sense-data are the immediate objects of experience in
veridical cases. Fourth, do sense-data exist through time or are they
momentary? Can they exist when not being perceived? Are they public or
private? Can they be themselves misperceived? Do they exist in minds or
are they extra-mental, even if not physical? On the basis of the
intractability of these questions, it has been argued that the
conclusion of the argument from illusion is unacceptable or even
unintelligible, even in the absence of a clear diagnosis of exactly
where and how it goes wrong.
Direct realists can potentially deny the existence of any such
thing as a mental image but this is difficult to maintain, since we seem
able to visually imagine all sorts of things with ease. Even if
perception does not involve images other mental processes like
imagination certainly seem to. One view, similar to Reid's, is that we
do have images of various sorts in our minds when we perceive, dream,
hallucinate and imagine but when we actually perceive things, our
sensations cannot be considered objects of perception or attention. The
only objects of perception are external objects. Even if perception is
accompanied by images, or sensations, it is wrong to say we perceive
sensations. Direct realism defines perception as perception of external
objects where an "external object" is allowed to be a photon in the eye
but not an impulse in a nerve leading from the eye. Recent work in
neuroscience suggests a shared ontology for perception, imagination and
dreaming, with similar areas of brain being used for all of these.
Problems with the indirect theory
A problem with representationalism is that if simple data flow and information processing
is assumed then something in the brain must be interpreting incoming
data as a "percept". This something is often described as a homunculus, although the term homunculus is also used to imply an entity that creates a continual regress, and this need not be implied. This suggests that some phenomenon other than simple data flow and information processing is involved in perception. This is more of an issue now than it was for rationalist
philosophers prior to Newton, such as Descartes, for whom physical
processes were poorly defined. Descartes held that there is a
"homunculus" in the form of the soul, belonging to a form of natural
substance known as res cogitans that obeyed different laws from those obeyed by solid matter (res extensa).
Although Descartes' duality of natural substances may have echoes in
modern physics (Bose and Fermi statistics) no agreed account of
'interpretation' has been formulated. Thus representationalism remains
an incomplete description of perception. Aristotle realized this and
simply proposed that ideas themselves (representations) must be aware—in
other words that there is no further transfer of sense impressions
beyond ideas.
A potential difficulty with representational realism is that, if we
only have knowledge of representations of the world, how can we know
that they resemble in any significant way the objects to which they are
supposed to correspond? Any creature with a representation in its brain
would need to interact with the objects that are represented to identify
them with the representation. This difficulty would seem reasonably to
be covered by the learning by exploration of the world that goes on
throughout life. However, there may still be a concern that if the
external world is only to be inferred,
its 'true likeness' might be quite different from our idea of it. The
representational realist would answer to this that "true likeness" is an
intuitive concept that falls in the face of logic, since a likeness
must always depend on the way in which something is considered.
A semantic difficulty may arise when considering reference
in representationalism. If a person says "I see the Eiffel Tower" at a
time when they are indeed looking at the Eiffel Tower, to what does the
term "Eiffel Tower" refer? The direct realist might say that in the
representational account people do not really see the tower but rather
'see' the representation. However, this is a distortion of the meaning
of the word see which the representationalist does not imply. For the
representationalist the statement refers to the Eiffel Tower, which
implicitly is experienced in the form of a representation. The
representationalist does not imply that when a person refers to the
Eiffel Tower, they are referring to their sense experience, and when another person refers to the Tower, they are referring to their sense experience.
Furthermore, representative realism claims that we perceive our
perceptual intermediaries-we can attend to them-just as we observe our
image in a mirror. However, as we can scientifically verify, this is
clearly not true of the physiological components of the perceptual
process. This also brings up the problem of dualism and its relation to representative realism, concerning the incongruous marriage of the metaphysical and the physical.
The new objection to the Homunculus Argument claims that it
relies on a naive view of sensation. Because the eyes respond to light
rays is no reason for supposing that the visual field requires eyes to
see it. Visual sensation (the argument can be extrapolated to the other
senses) bears no direct resemblance to the light rays at the retina,
nor to the character of what they are reflected from or pass through or
what was glowing at the origin of them. The reason given is that they
only bear the similarities of co-variation with what arrives at the retinas.
Just as the currents in a wire going to a loudspeaker vary
proportionately with the sounds that emanate from it but have no other
likeness, so too does sensation vary proportionately (and not
necessarily directly) with what causes it but bears no other resemblance
to the input. This implies that the color we experience is actually a
cortical occurrence, and that light rays and external surfaces are not
themselves colored. The proportional variations with which cortical
color changes are there in the external world, but not color as we
experience it. Contrary to what Gilbert Ryle believed, those who argue
for sensations being brain processes do not have to hold that there is a
"picture" in the brain since this is impossible according to this
theory since actual pictures in the external world are not colored.
It is plain that Ryle unthinkingly carried over what the eyes do to the
nature of sensation; A. J. Ayer at the time described Ryle's position
as "very weak".
So there is no "screen" in front of cortical "eyes", no mental objects
before one. As Thomas Hobbes put it: "How do we take notice of sense?—by
sense itself". Moreland Perkins has characterized it thus: that sensing
is not like kicking a ball, but rather "kicking a kick". Today there are still philosophers arguing for color being a property of external surfaces, light sources, etc.
A more fundamental criticism is implied in theories of this type.
The differences at the sensory and perceptual levels between agents
require that some means of ensuring at least a partial correlation can
be achieved that allows the updatings involved in communication to take
place. The process in an informative statement begins with the parties
hypothetically assuming that they are referring to the "same" entity or
"property", even though their selections from their sensory fields
cannot match; we can call this mutually imagined projection the "logical
subject" of the statement. The speaker then produces the logical
predicate which effects the proposed updating of the "referent". If the
statement goes through, the hearer will now have a different percept and
concept of the "referent"—perhaps even seeing it now as two things and
not one. The radical conclusion is that we are premature in conceiving
of the external as already sorted into singular "objects" in the first
place, since we only need to behave as if they are already logically singular.
The diagram at the beginning of this entry would thus be thought of as a
false picture of the actual case, since to draw "an" object as already
selected from the real is only to treat the practically needful, but
strictly false, hypothesis of objects-as-logically-singular as
ontologically given. The proponents of this view thus argue that there
is no need actually to believe in the singularity of an object since we can manage perfectly well by mutually imagining
that 'it' is singular. A proponent of this theory can thus ask the
direct realist feels why he or she thinks it is necessary to move to
taking the imagining of singularity for real when there is no practical
difference in the outcome in action. Therefore, although there are
selections from our sensory fields which for the time being we treat as
if they were objects, they are only provisional, open to corrections at
any time, and, hence, far from being direct representations of
pre-existing singularities, they retain an experimental character.
Virtual constructs or no, they remain, however, selections that are
causally linked to the real and can surprise us at any time—which
removes any danger of solipsism in this theory. This approach dovetails
with the philosophy known as social constructivism.
The character of experience of a physical object can be altered
in major ways by changes in the conditions of perception or of the
relevant sense-organs and the resulting neurophysiological
processes, without change in the external physical object that
initiates this process and that may seem to be depicted by the
experience. Conversely any process that yields the same sensory/neural
results will yield the same perceptual experience, no matter what the
physical object that initiated the process may have been like.
Furthermore, the causal process that intervenes between the external
object and the perceptual experience takes time, so that the character
of the experience reflects, at the most, an earlier stage of that object
than the one existing at the moment of perception. As in observations
of astronomical objects the external object may have ceased to exist
long before the experience occurs. These facts are claimed to point to
the conclusion that the direct object of experience is an entity
produced at the end of this causal process, distinct from any physical
object that initiates the process."
The adverbial theory
The above argument invites the conclusion of a perceptual dualism that
raises the issue of how and whether the object can be known by
experience. The adverbial theory proposes "that this dualism is a
dualism of objects, with perceptual experience being a more direct experience of objects of a different sort, sense-data." Perceptual dualism implies:
both an act of awareness (or apprehension) and an object (the sense-datum) which that act apprehends or is an awareness of. The fundamental idea of the adverbial theory, in contrast, is that there is no need for such objects and the problems that they bring with them (such as whether they are physical or mental or somehow neither). Instead, it is suggested, merely the occurrence of a mental act or mental state with its own intrinsic character is enough to account for the character of immediate experience.
According
to the adverbial theory, when, for example, I experience a silver
elliptical shape (as when viewing a coin from an angle) I am in a
certain specific state of sensing or sensory awareness or of being
appeared to: I sense in a certain manner or am appeared to in a certain
way, and that specific manner of sensing or of being appeared to
accounts for the content of my experience: I am in a certain distinctive
sort of experiential state. There need be no object or entity of any
sort that is literally silver and elliptical in the material world or in
the mind. I experience a silver and elliptical
shape because an object or entity that literally has that color and
shape is directly before my mind. But the nature of these entities and
the way in which they are related to the mind are difficult to
understand. The adverbial theory has the advantage of being
metaphysically simpler, avoiding issues about the nature of sense-data,
but we gain no real understanding of the nature of the states in
question or of how exactly they account for the character of immediate
experience."