That's as informative as the non-existent position you claim you've got up your sleeve.
You dissappoint me. More grade-school goading. I have explained to you why you shall have to wait for that, and I have extended a fairly lengthy version of it to two witnesses.
Running out of arguments?
It was A) a joke, and B) as much as your post deserved. For the sake of fun, though...
Just in case anyone still doesn't get why "sunrise" is eliminable but "mind" is not:
*sigh*
In the case of sunrise the word can be eliminated because we now have two different perspectives within the model. We can think of a fixed Earth or a fixed sun and we can all agree on an explanation of why there are two perspectives and, crucially, how these two perspectives are related.
We can all agree except the geocentrists. The term "earthrotation" is eliminable to them.
In the case of the word "mind" we have a different problem.
he asserts.
There's two perspectives allright - although we can't agree on how to define them.
Depends. Within a perspective there may be tremendous agreement. The words you happen to have chosen are borrowed from a centuries-old dualism, so it is not terribly surprising that they have picked up a bit of baggage over time.
But at the moment we've got a bunch of words that apply from the 1st-person, subjective perspective and a bunch that apply from the 3rd-person, objective perspective.
You are already making assumptions here. You equate first-person with "subjective" and third-person with "objective", assuming a dualist view. Go directly to jail; do not pass go, do not collect $200.
So what we need in order to be able to eliminate "mind" is a coherent explanation of the relationship between the two perspectives, like we've got for the sunrise and the movement of the Earth.
Or to recognise that the question as you have phrased it has already assumed two perspectives.
At the moment, we do not have this explanation.
Nor do we have to, save for questioners who assume that the two perspectives exist. If we search all of Florida for the fountain of youth, but do not find it, does that mean that the map we draw is incorrect? Or is the lack of an imaginary item a flaw at all?
The various different metaphysical positions being discussed are different answers to the question.
*yawn* Wake me up the moment any one of them says something that matters.
The problem is that this time, unlike with the case of the sunrise, the arguments are metaphysical instead of physical, and as Paul has noted, metaphysics is a whole different ballgame.
The arguments may well be metaphysical, but that does not mean that the question is important. You made up a question. Don't feel bad; many people before you have done so, too.
There's a very important reason why materialistic science can't ever explain the difference between these two perspectives: Science itself is founded on one of them.
Not true.
The scientific view of the world (which is materialistic) is restricted to operating within one of the two perspectives which needs to be resolved.
Not true. Just ask hammy--science works just fine with objective idealism. Science is independent of monism, Geoff.
That is what makes these questions metaphysical instead of physical.
What makes them meaningful? Oh, they aren't.
So in this case, unlike the sunrise, materialistic science can't stand outside the division between the two perspectives.
Well...perhaps materialistic science can't, but science can. If thinking is a natural event, then science can study it.
The eliminativists realise this, which is why they want to eliminate the word "mind" completely.
Wow. And you called me an eliminativist? Next thing you know, you'll inform me I am against "love" as well. Funny thing...Radical Behaviorists are the most anti-mentalism people I know, and yet they still use "I changed my mind" in conversation. "Sunrise" and "mind" are part of our language, and that which we call a rose, by any other name would smell as sweet.
They know they cannot use a materialistic theory to reduce it so it has to be theoretically eliminable.
First off, the problem is not here, it is back when you invented the question to begin with. Secondly, you have not yet succeeded in demonstrating that this materialism is different from any other materialism.
Eliminative materialism is merely a version of the claim that it is impossible for materialism to stand outside itself in order to compare itself to idealism and dualism.
Which it needs to do, in order to answer the question about who would win, Superman or Batman. Or that other fictional question you came up with.
Either way, as things stand, the word "mind" cannot be eliminated and nobody can agree whether it's theoretically possible to so.
I bet Jeff Corey and I could agree on it. Or if you mean "everybody", then the geocentrists are going to quibble on sunrise just as easily.
Eliminative materialism is the claim that it is possible.
Do eliminative materialists agree on this? Is it only with non-eliminative-materialists that they disagree? I am trying still to parse your claim that "nobody can agree". Unless there is only one eliminative materialist, it seems that some can agree.
Other forms of materialism do not entail this claim, which is why they are incoherent.
Incoherency, sadly, does not bar one from taking part in this debate.