Let's consider the quality of Bernardo's arguments ...
http://www.bernardokastrup.com/2014/08/the-greatest-contradiction-of-common.html
Here he tries to characterize the materialist POV as logically inconsistent.
On the one hand, our common sense says that the colors we see, the sounds we hear, the smells we feel, the textures we sense, are all the actual and concrete reality. .... , our common sense also seems to suggest that death is the end of our consciousness.....
Now, the point of this essay is extraordinarily simple: these two common-sense beliefs are mutually exclusive. They cannot be both true. ...
Major claim: the existence of an external reality and our belief in the 'end of consciousness' are inconsistent. So how does he demonstrate the inconsistency ?
Let’s start with the postulate that bodily dissolution — death — indeed implies the end of consciousness. Such a notion is entirely based on the idea that your body, particularly your brain, generates all your experiences. ...
The word "generate" does not apply well. A conventional materialist POV presumes that an external phenomenon is apprehended via senses by the mind as an experience; further that the mind directs actions that impact experience.
But if the notion is true, then all of your subjective experiences and their qualities — colors, sounds, flavors, textures, warmth, etc. — are merely representations created within your head.
No! The materialist view is that the similar external phenomena promotes comparable experiences. It's not
all in your brain/mind - just the apprehension part.
The "real world out there" has none of the qualities of experience: no colors, no melody, no flavors, no warmth. Supposedly, it is a purely abstract realm of quantities akin to mathematical equations.
Mathematics is an incompetent analogy. Some physical phenomenon like heat or light impinges on our senses and produces experiences of warmth or color closely related to the phenomenon.
It cannot even be visualized, for visualization always entails qualities of experience. In essence, if this is true, your entire life unfolds inside your skull.
No ! This is a distortion that only follows from your mischaracterization of the materialist position. A materialist will recognize that they interact with their hypothetical "real world" . "Life" is a lot more than merely observing experiences, but also involves interacting and modifying with the experiences reality. "Life unfold[ing]" is not like watching a movie.
The materialist POV is obviously that experience is a interaction/reaction of the mind/brain to external phenomena. So - life does not unfold within the mind
alone. Here Bernardo is proposing a false dichotomy, he is trying to claim that experience and reality are separable (to a materialist); this is like claiming that we can talk about fish as a separable concept from water, or that the head & tail of a coin are separable.
Your actual skull is somewhere beyond the room where you are sitting, enveloping it from all sides. After all, the room you are experiencing right now is supposedly within your head.
There is no logic here, just concept-salad. To a materialist obviously the "skull" is not beyond the room in any way at all. To materialists the real room contains the real mind, while the mind merely has some limited apprehension of the room via senses.
Further the mind within the room may cease to apprehend - die. There is nothing inconsistent or hard to grasp here.
But what if all this is baloney? What if the colors, sounds, and smells you are experiencing right now are the real reality — the actual world — not "hallucinated" representations within your skull? Then the necessary implication is that all of reality is in consciousness, for reality is then "made of" the qualities of subjective experience. But if that is so, it is your body that is in consciousness, not consciousness in your body. After all, your body is in reality, not reality in your body. And then, in turn, the dissolution of your body cannot imply the end of consciousness; not any more than the death of your dreamed-up avatar in a nightly dream can imply your physical death. After all, it is the avatar that is in your dreaming consciousness, not your consciousness in the avatar.
Sigh ! To paraphrase Alan Watts, when one is confronted with a paradox there is usually a glaring false dichotomy at the heart of it. Is there a pot without a crack ? So can there be a crack without a pot ? No - it's just crack-pottery to consider two aspects of one thing as separable.
Same w/ this tired, ancient mind-body false dichotomy. If Bernardo can evidence a mind w/o a body - then we can talk, until then this is just his brand of mysticism.
Yes, I do. There is an over-reliance on syllogistic logic w/o reference to semantics, leading to specious claims.
You attempt to disprove that materialist POV, by tentatively assuming to is true then trying to show that this is logically inconsistent (a negative proof). However to create an inconsistency you inject your monist-idealism claim that the "mind is beyond the room". This presents a circular argument fallacy as well as a straw-man fallacy.