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In thephilosophy of perception,critical realism is the theory that some of oursense-data (for example, those ofprimary qualities) can and do accurately represent external objects, properties, and events, while other of our sense-data (for example, those ofsecondary qualities and perceptual illusions) do not accurately represent any external objects, properties, and events. Put simply, critical realism highlights a mind-dependent aspect of the world that reaches to understand (and comes to an understanding of) the mind-independent world.
According toLocke—following a tradition which can be traced back to the ancient (Democritus) and modern (Galileo Galilei,Isaac Newton)atomism—somesense-data, namely thesense-data of secondary qualities (i.e. colours, tastes, smells, sounds), do not represent anything in the external world, even if they are caused by external qualities (primary qualities). By its talk of sense-data and representation, this theory depends on or presupposes the truth ofrepresentationalism.
René Descartes developed the theory that, since we could not definitely prove anything we experienced, the only thing which is sure to exist is our mind. He explains this by stating that in order to experience anything—real or fake—we first have to exist at all. That led to his famous saying "Cogito, ergo sum." (I think, therefore I am.).
The American critical realist movement was a response both todirect realism, as well as toidealism andpragmatism. In very broad terms, American critical realism was a form ofrepresentative realism, in which there are objects that stand as mediators between independent real objects and perceivers. Prominent developers of American critical realism areRoy Wood Sellars and his sonWilfrid Sellars,[1] andMaurice Mandelbaum.[2]
One innovation was that these mediators are not ideas (British empiricism), but properties, essences, or "character complexes".
Similar developments occurred in the UK. Major figures includedSamuel Alexander,John Cook Wilson,H. A. Prichard,H. H. Price, andC. D. Broad.
Nicolai Hartmann renewed the interest in the critical realist theory in Germany.[3]