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Naïve realism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Direct realism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Direct realism , also known as naïve realism or common sense realism, is a theory of perception that claims that the senses provide us with direct awareness of the external world. In contrast, indire...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_realism |
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Naive realism is just a way of looking at the world. Also called common sense realism, things are perceived directly as they are. True naive realists would never sum up or analyze their views, because they do not consider them views but the way things obviously are.
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A common and obvious choice here usually goes under the name Naive Realism. According to this perspective, our senses reliably produce accurate information about the world around us — and, moreover, that these are the only means that we can regularly trust.
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Naive Realism in Contemporary Philosophy ... But Flanagan provides subtle clues that he still clings to a few last vestiges of naive realism. Although Flanagan approves of the investigation of brain processes through phenomenology, he also claims (p. 12) that "Phenomenology alone has been tried and tested.
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Naive Realism in Contemporary Psychology ... Nor would Gregory explicitly defend naive realism, a position which he would almost certainly reject, although that philosophy unwittingly pervades his arguments on the other peripheral issues.
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Ross, Lee, & Ward, Andrew, Naive Realism in Everyday Life: Implications for Social Conflict and Misunderstanding, In T. Brown, E. Reed, and E. Turiel (eds.), Values and Knowledge, in press.; ... Construal and Social Enmity: The Third Tenant of Naive Realism; The third tenet suggests that people first believe others will...
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