"Scepticism arises because 'for so long as men thought that real things subsisted without the mind, and that their knowledge was only so far forth real as it was conformable to real things, it follows, they could not be certain they had any real knowledge at all. For how can it be known, that the things which are perceived, are conformable to those which are not perceived, or exist without the mind?' The nub of the problem is that if we are acquainted only with our own perceptions, and never with the things which are supposed to lie beyond them, how can we hope for knowledge of those things, or even be justified in asserting their existence?"--A.C. Grayling quoting Berkeley
My question is: Isn't one answer to this problem re representationalism that concerns Berkeley that if we were seriously out of sync with the real (mind-independent) world, then how could we have survived as well as we have? If I reach for an object,it's always there (unless I hallucinate).---If it's ALL a "Matrix" world then I can see the point. But if we are realist, believing the world to be there even if we were not, then it seems assured we are in a pretty good fit with it since we get along so well. Hope I'm putting this clearly.
Also (if I may add a second question)...In Berkeley we still have a form of realism as Grayling points out elsewhere in his essay. The world exists mind-independently (re-ally) relative to us,just not to God's mind. So what would be the true opposite of realism? That is, what would we call the view that would say there is NO mind-independent world at all? E.g. In Schopenhauer's atheistic idealism, he doesn't have God to shore it all up,so how does he expect us to be idealists? Is Solipsism the true opposite of realism? Very perplexing.
Thank You.......Bill H., Moraga,CA
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