Why is your use here of the word "are" any more meaningful than materialists' use of it in the phrase "minds are physical processes in a physical brain"?
I've explained what it means. I am not depending on that "are" to cover up a hole in my position.
Like I already said, whenever materialists say "physical", pretend they said "noumenal". Now what's the difference between your position and theirs?
The materialists also believe the objects they directly percieve to be physical. If "physical" now refers to noumenal then the objects they percieve cannot also be physical - at least not in anything like the same way - you'd have to invent "two kinds" of physical (physical-I-can-see and physical-I-can't-see). It is for exactly this reason why people are then
forced to invent the word "qualia" to refer to the experiences of perceiving objects. The
fundamental mistake of physicalism is to confuse the objects of direct experiences of a spatio-temporal world with the noumenal entities that are causing those experiences. This mistake has led to a vast array of other confusions from cognitive science to quantum mechanics. Proper philosophy
doesn't even start till this mistake has been recognised.
I'm with Paul on metaphysics. If you can't do an experiment to check whether you're right, how do you decide whether you're right?
All you can do is examine your concepts and attempt to eliminate contradictions. Unfortunately most people simply attempt to defend whatever it is they
want to believe.
What does it even mean to be right? Nothing. It's all just meaningless words.
You wouldn't say that about somebody who is wrong about evolution.
Zero equals infinity? Everything equals nothing? That's about as contradictory as one can get.
It
seem like it is ABSOLUTELY as contradictory as you can get. But if you suspend your disbelief for a moment, go with the re-definition and then start thinking about some of the unanswerable questions of philosophy, they either stop being questions or stop being unanswerable. It looks like the mother of all contradictions but the truth is that the failure to realise it is in fact
not a contradiction which leads to all the other contradictions.
The reason we think it is contradictory is because we have a mistake in our way of thinking about certain things. We have got this concept "nothing" which we use to refer to the abscence of anything. I have tried to illustrate this to people by explaining that the whole of mathematics could be seen as being contained in a zero, or that 1 and -1 already exist within 0. This is what is wrong with out normal ideas about being and nothing. We think of 0 as nothing, because we use it to represent "no instances of a thing". But it isn't just the abscence of anything - it's also a sort of pivotal point and sort of a totality of everything. It doesn't actually take an enormous leap of the imagination to grasp what I am aiming at here. When I post these sorts of ideas, the usual response is somebody coming along and claiming this has some ort of negative effect on mathematics, or stops them using 0 to do their job, or moans that I'm making unprovable assertions. Which somewhat misses the point of why I used the example in the first place. It's not being offered as a proof - it's being offered as an "intuition pump".
Geoff