??? I’m just saying that if you ask “If a tree falls…” My response is, okay, you’ve asked me to imagine a tree falling with no one around. Well, yes, the tree that I am imagining is indeed making a sound.
But trees
do fall when no-one is around! What is unknown is whether or no they make a sound when they do so. I am not imagining the circumstance, but rather am making an inquiry as to one of its particulars.
But really the question is not about trees falling; it is about the nature of sound itself. Is the sound the vibrations themselves, or is the sound our brains’ interpretation of these vibrations as detected by the ears?
I would say that this question and the question of colour resolve themselves in this way: some quality of refraction of light or vibration of air columns by material objects are indeed the things themselves, colour and sound. Let me explain:
The appearance of each colour is predicated upon the sensory faculties of each observer. Nevertheless, since sensation is generally uniform, blue will appear
one way to me; colour X which I call “blue” may appear to you such that, were I to see it through your eyes, I should call it colour Y, which I call “yellow”; colour X, furthermore, looks, as interpreted by your senses, as colour X does to mine. Nevertheless, as you have no innate knowledge of the colours themselves, but rather have learnt to name them through sense experience and communication with others, you will certainly refer to colour X as “blue” and to colour Y as “yellow”, even though, were
I unexpectedly to experience your sense life, I would call colour X “yellow”, as you saw it.
Nevertheless, to any one observer, each blue object appears one way, each green object, another. Colour, as sound, is a property of material objects, and this is demonstrated by our ability to discourse rationally about it; it is not, in short, an attribute
arbitrarily assigned by our minds at random to material objects, but is interpreted consistently as a response to real characteristics of those objects.
Therefore, sound
as such is produced by the falling of the tree, although it remain unheard.
I’m not trying to convince believers not to believe.
OK. I’m not really sure what you’re about.