Perceiver in a sentence as a noun

This is a mechanical perception that reflects the passion of the perceiver. For sports fans, it always feels like the refs are against their team too.

But they saw a strong enough morality in what they were doing to perceiver. This dates as far back in human history lore such as in the bible.

This is an artifact in the perceiver, not the perceived. We all have a more parochial perspective than we imagine we do.

Since value is subjective based on the perceiver, you're basically saying that it's spam if the recipient decides it's spam.

The perception of hat color is largely dependent on the perceiver's opinion of the content in question. That's why Calacanis swears up and down Mahalo is not spam, and why no one here buys it.

I remember continually asking the question 'who perceives the perceiver?' and then reaching for an answer, only to be kicked 'up a level' in this recursive loop and starting the process all over again.

An objective reality exists independent of any perceiver or of the perceiver's emotions, feelings, wishes, hopes or fears. Couldn't agree more.

Neither the perceived nor the perceiver can exist without the process of perceiving. However absurd, the things related can be seen as derivative of the relationship itself.

The decisive element here is the passions of the perceiver, not the object being perceived. That's why people's perceptions are so contradictory: what they're perceiving is an inverse of their own identifications.

An imagined perception is a perception that depends on the perceiver making some effort to suppose that something is true. It could be a daydream, or it could be when you watch a fictional film, which requires you to imagine that it is real, even though you know that actually it is not real.

That's as low as the bar can get, yet even that is enough to reveal that way over 90%, probably over 99%, of perceptions of propaganda have no basis beyond the feelings of the perceiver.

> Too often, the response to perceiving someones incompetence is the perceiver shutting down, instead of taking a rising-tide-raises-all-boats attitude. Except this assumes a rising tide.

But when it comes to consciousness, there is no perceiver distinct from the perception, and so you cannot rely on such a distinction to cash out the apparent unified whole of consciousness.

The theory of projectivism states that an object's color is a combination of its physical properties and the perception in the viewer; namely, that color is an experience tied to a dual system of subject and perceiver. This is the generally accepted theory today.

The act of perceiving it immediately transforms it into a model compatible with the perceiver. If the information is conveyed to someone else, another perceiver, it is transformed twice more -- once in translating it to the communication medium, and once more to match the new perceiver's model.

When we say something is beautiful, we mean it is aesthetically pleasing, and without a perceiver of an object, there is nothing to be aesthetically pleased. If you believe in god, space aliens, etc. , we can shift the admirer of beauty to another perceiver, but still, without the perceiver there is no concept of beauty ascribed to the object.

I want to make this clear; if one thinks something may be racist, one would be well served double checking one's own thinking, and the context behind it first for whether it is the perceiver themselves projecting onto a situation in which none is present. Failure to do so renders one completely blind to the actually extant major sources of systemic racial discrimination that are in dire need of wiping out.

But that, of course, is why we invented scientists and mathematicians: to find out something true that grounds itself in checkable realities external to the mind of the perceiver, rather than ultimately grounding itself in the intuitions, rationalizations, and delusions generated by human psychology.

In the phrase, "perception" refers to superficial perceptions such as what a person looks like via their photo, and how they are imagined to be, the perceiver filling in a lot of gaps to fit their ideas; "reality" refers to perceptions from experiences with the person, such as you might get from actually hanging out together, talking, arguing, living together, getting to know each other.

Perceiver definitions

noun

a person who becomes aware (of things or events) through the senses

See also: percipient observer beholder