Telescopes and microscopes do not enlarge reality, they only enlarge images of reality. Everything seen through a lens is an image of reality, not reality. But our eyes have lenses, so everything we see is only an image of reality. Can this be true?

Perception is not ingestion: when you see a tree, the tree does not enter your brain. Moreover, seeing does involve the creation of an image on the backs of your eyes. But it does not follow that you only ever see an image. Maybe an analogy to a photograph will help. A photograph of a tree is an image; but it is not a photograph of an image, it is a photograph of a tree. Similarly, seeing a tree may involve an image of the tree, but what we see is the tree, not the image.

If it was proved tomorrow that plants can feel pain, what would happen to the arguments of vegetarians who are vegetarians because they don't believe in causing animals pain?

The main way we cause pain to aminals is through the way we raise them in factory farms, so even if plants could feel pain (though like Richard, I bet they don't), we might be able to grow and harvest them without causing them any more pain than, say, we cause a free-range chicken. But if forcing them to grow in those straight rows causes them severe and prolonged distress....

Does not Descartes beg the question when he argues "I think therefore I exist?" My problem with Descartes' argument arises from his attempt to treat "existence" as a predicate that can be applied to subjects. When he says "I think", the word "I" will have a referent if and only if I exist. So, if the proposition "I think" is meaningful -that is, if it succeeds in attributing the property of thinking to a subject "I"-, it is trivial that I exist. However, in order for the proposition "I think" to be meaningful, I must exist in the first place. So, Descartes seems to beg the question of "my" existence. One might just as well assert, "I dance the funky chicken therefore I exist" or my favorite "I outgrabe therefore I exist" (a reference to Lewis Carroll). Thanks...

I'm not sure that the sentence 'I exist' would be meaningless rather than just false if there were no referent for 'I', but the worry about question begging remains. And you are in good company with the funky chicken. Thomas Hobbes, in his objections to Descartes, asks why 'I think therefore I am' is any better than 'I walk therefore I am' ('Ambulo ergo sum'). One reply Descartes can make to Hobbes is that although existence follows equally from walking and thinking, Descartes has a certainty about his own thought that he does not have about his own walking (since he doesn't even at this stage know he has legs). There does seem to be something particularly secure about the belief that one is thinking -- how could one be mistaken? Indeed the belief is self-verifying. To believe one is thinking makes it so, since belief is thought. Believing one is walking, or dancing, does not make it so, sincd believing is not dancing. Still, I think the worry about question begging remains. For...

If every life results in death, then what is the meaning of life?

The meaning of life comes from what you do in your life: your activities and achievements. These are real even though you die, and would be no more real if you lived forever (though admittedly you would have time for a lot more of them).

I am having trouble with the classic problem of free choice vs. determinism specifically in the sphere of human responsibility. While I often recognise that there are external factors that can and do bring people to act in various ways, I also find myself impatient with those who are unwilling to admit to a certain degree of responsibility. My problem seems to be that I recognise both not just as possible, but true simultaneously. Philosophically speaking, can this be so?

At the most general level, it is difficult to see how free will is even logically possible, whether determinism is true or not. For if determinism is true, then everything we do follows from the laws of nature plus the state of the universe before we were born; and if determinism is not true, then there is a random element to what happens. Neither of these possibilities seems to leave room for free will. That was the bad news. The good news is that the fact that our actions have external causes is entirely compatible with their also having internal causes, in the form of our beliefs and desires. My consumption of the banana split was caused in part by the presence of that item on the menu -- an external cause -- but also by a desire on my part. If I had not had that desire, or if my desire to lose weight had been stronger, I would not have eaten the banana split. So insofar as the existence of internal causes is enough for us to hold someone responsible (as we often suppose it to be), then...

What flaws should one be wary of in an argument? Please explain in layman terms (I have not studied philosophy). Thanks.

In this context, an argument is a set of claims -- the premises -- presented as a reason to accept another claim -- the conclusion. If you are checking for flaws, it is useful to distinguish two fundamentally different ways an argument can go wrong. The first is that one or more or the premises is false or at least unwarranted. The second is that even if all the premises were true, they wouldn't provide a good reason to believe the conclusion. The argument 'Some philosophers are horses therefore some horses are philosophers' suffers from the first flaw (false premise); the argument 'Some people are not philosophers therefore some philosophers are not people' suffers from the second flaw (premise does not provide a good reason for conclusion). When you are checking an argument, consider both types of flaw. Are the premises true? Do they provide good reason for the conclusion? In tackling the second question, it is often a good idea to ask yourself whether, if the premises were all true,...

What is a function (of an object or an idea)? I once read that functions are conventional or "artificial". I can understand that an ashtray has its function (being a place to put cigarette ash) only if we assign it to it, but the function of our hearts (to pump blood) seems quite more natural.

Some objects simply aquire a function in virtue of being used in a certain way, like the rock I use to prop open my office door. But traits of biological organisms do seem to have natural functions, like the white fur of the polar bear, whose function is camoflage. There is a spirited discussion among philosophers of biology over just how to analyse biological functions, but the selected effects account is perhaps the most popular. On this view, an effect of a biological trait is a function if the trait was selected for by natural selection because of that effect. Thus camoflage is a function of white fur because it is in virtue of that effect that polar bears came to have white fur. Notice that not all effects of biological traits qualify as functions on this account. The heart pumps blood, and that is presumably an effect that was selected for and so counts as a function. But the heart also produces that adorable lub-dub sound; that is just as much an effect of the heart, but presumably not the...

I am having trouble with secondary qualities, which are manufactured in the brain after receipt of digital signals from the sense organs. For example, if I see a green leaf, I know that chlorphyll molecules in the leaf transmit electromagnetic radiation of a frequency such as to produce a sensation of green in my brain. The problem is that all the empirical objects that I perceive are structures of secondary qualities, and these are all outside my head. So where are secondary qualities, inside my head, or outside?

I don't know how much this will help, but there seem to be three things associated with the color green: the experience of green inside your head; the disposition of certain surfaces to produce that experience, something which is not inside your head though it is defined in terms of something inside your head; and the molecular structure of certain surfaces out there that help to cause experiences of green. Most philosophers agree that all three of these things exist, but they disagree about which of them should be identified with 'the color green'.

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