I've noticed that the "what difference does it make?" line is one taken solely by the materialists. They do this because they implicitly recognise a weakness in their own position.
That's an assumption I don't agree with. Being a materialist myself, I'd like to at least speak on my own behalf, and not have you speak for me.
Whereas skepticism as to the existence of a material world, existing independent of mind, is at least not patently absurd, and is not at all self-defeating.
'Acting independent of mind' is where you're making an incorrect assumption. While I can't speak for every materialist (just like I'll assume you don't speak for all idealists), is irrelevant. You could exist totally as a figment of my imagination. My mind could be all there is. Yet that does not change the fact that the universe - as my 'universe mind' sees it - acts as if it operates under a set of immutable laws.
As materialists are exposed to discussions on this matter they become uncomfortable, and try to get out of their fix by trying to argue or imply that idealism and solipsism are the same thing, which they clearly are not.
Again, we'll keep this discussion to how you and I see each side, and not continue to use broad sweeping generalisations which assume how all members of the respective side think. Deal?
Idealism puts mind (consciousness if you prefer) at the centre of reality. Mind is 'what reality is made of'. Mind is primary.
Materialism puts matter (physicality independent of mind/consciousness if you prefer) at the centre of reality.
Matter/ Physicality Independent of Mind .. is 'what reality is made of'. Matter is primary.
So far, I don't have a problem with this. If you choose to say 'all laws are contained within one's own personal mind', and I say 'all laws are external', then it really doesn't matter, for both will give rise to the same universe we perceive. The main tenet of materialism is that there are laws which seem to explain what we see - the ultimate, fundamental reality is beyond describing, ultimately. Even if we find some mathematical description of space-time and the laws embedded in it, you're still free to describe that as a feature of your mind. And I can't argue - but really, it's pointless.
If people can't see how choosing between these two options makes any difference then they have to be living in cloud-cuckoo land.
Then you'll have to do a better job explaining it. If I can only start with one absolute - that I exist (as demonstrated by my act of thinking) - then it doesn't matter if all laws are a part of my act of thinking, or act upon it. Those laws are still apparent.
When Mind is primary there is nothing at all surprising about a whole host of things that orthodox JREFers can't stand.. such as free will, God, intelligence behind the existence of mathematically describable physical laws, the existence of consciousness associated with physical lifeforms, the fine tuning of the universe to enable life, the imposition of determinism at the macro-level in order to enable Mind to take meaningful decisions which will therefore definitely be physically enacted, moral responsibility for ones choices, spirituality, the exquisitely intelligent design of lifeforms, spiritual practice, existence as being objectively directional purposeful and meaningful, the continuation of life beyond Mind's association with a particular organic form, most of the paranormal... etc.. (I could go on for ages but you get the picture)
Except it's all a non-sequitor. These things don't rely on the ontology of reality - they rely on the nature of the laws describing everything.
If there is a deity behind everything, there can only be the assumption that it is distinct from those laws which create my 'mind universe' or the 'external universe'. If so...what makes me think it could exist? It's influence? Then it must subscribe to those laws.
If, however, you believe that the universe has no symmetrical laws, then we have a different argument. I'll wait to hear your response before I open the discussion to that train of thought.
On the contrary, when Matter / Physicality Independent of Mind (PIM) are seen as primary one is forced to describe all the above as either non-existent, fraudulent, or at the very most as epiphenomena (side-effects) of the existence of PIM.
Another strawman. If the mind is independent of matter, it is up to those who believe so to demonstrate that it does not operate under any laws whatsoever. If materialism is the system by which the universe operates under a set of laws, how does the mind operate if not under any system?
Well, you can call it whatever you like. To me, laws imply intentionality.. wanting to get something done, whether it be legally in the courts, or physically in the created Universe.
Ah, now we're getting to the crux of it. You believe, personally, that laws imply an intention. Fine. If ultimately you're a deist who holds onto teleology because you can't contemplate anything else, then so be it. I won't stop you. If we're perceiving the same universe, and come to the same conclusions, yet you (post hoc) say 'that was ordained', I might think it offers nothing more than personal comfort...but if it helps you sleep at night, go for it.
But there is nothing that logically demands intention in the way these laws operate.
For intentionality to exist Mind has to exist. So Universal Laws at the physical level are a clear indicator of Universal Intentionality and thus Universal Mind.
If you can present to me a convincing argument which can explain some accidental (non-intentional) genesis of dozens of predictable physical laws and constants, then perhaps I might reconsider
Nope. However, it does surprise me that you're happy to see the origin of these laws as not requiring an intention. If a mind has intent, and the mind exists, under what intentions was that mind formed?
Turtles...all the way down.
(so do physicists, with the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle)
Hehe, spoken like somebody who doesn't quite understand the HUP. There is nothing in the mathematics to suggest that there is some unobservable cause. The end result is very predictable and follows causation neatly. The randomness in waveform collapse does not imply external causation - it implies no causation at all.
I really should start laying bets that QM is going to be abused in half of these discussions - I'd make a fortune.
Huge? No. It's just an average sized 'if'. The problem is, if is not a system, how would it operate? If not laws which interact, producing an outcome, then what? By any definition, a mind has certain properties which operate in conjunction with one another.
What you seem to be doing (which is rife among materialists) is applying modes of thought reasonably applicable to the conditioned 'material' space/time Universe, to that which exists independent of it.
It's like someone brought up in an Indian village assuming that everyone in the whole World lives on curry, rice and dahl.
The same may well not apply
Of course. That's true. But your analogy doesn't work.
We're not talking specifics of laws and rules. If you suggested that the edge of the universe might have different universal constants, I'd ask you what makes you say that. I wouldn't dismiss it entirely as impossible. Yet to suggest something exists without being based within some sort of system or interacting properties...well, it is simply a paradox. How can something exist and not exist at the same time? How can a mind exist, and not be embedded within a system of operation?
While I obviously still have questions, I appreciate the effort.
Malerin would probably state something similar. Hopefully I've saved him the bother.
To be blunt, I'd be surprised. Few idealists bother to even attempt to offer anything. They get stuck on getting past the 'minds can exist without existing' part.
I hope we can nut that one out.
Clearly not.
Test it in your own experience. Imagine something, your own imaginary World, if you like. Are you, as the imagination which created that World, limited to the laws which you imposed on it?
Interesting analogy. No, I'm not. But I do subscribe to another set of laws.
If, extending this analogy, a creator of this universe has created these laws and subscribes to his own...and the creator of that realm subscribes to its own...ad infinitum (which, although not parsimonous, is not illogical)...we'd still have to observe a set of laws, even if they operate within some sort of Russian doll hierarchy. Now, it's an interesting idea, but it has one flaw - you're insinuating that our minds also subscribe (therefore) the laws which are imposed onto the creator. Therefore, each system is not distinct at all, but is connected. We can now treat the entire system as a whole, as there are laws that knock on from one 'realm' to the next, and can be observed, questioned, tested...
We haven't progressed. It's still a material universe.
I don't think Malerin or myself are avoiding anything. We just happen to be enormously outnumbered here. We receive a lot of crap from dogmatists. If he loses his temper I think it's understandable. Often I just post my point of view and can't be arsed to follow it up because due to experience I know the kind of old, uninteresting, sometimes insulting, dogmatic replies I'm going to receive.
No offence, but this road runs both ways. We often read the same drivel from people who are also stumped and can't back up their claims. We also feel it's dogmatic. Of course, I try to judge each statement on its own merits, but when somebody avoids questions, I tend to find it difficult to respect their position.
[quoteJust to ask, do you think there is no difference?[/quote]
Honestly, it depends on the definitions. Since, as far as I understand it, materialism refers to the existance of laws which define my observations and can be described according to what I see with regard to time and space, it depends on what each person thinks idealism means. Some refer to a distinct mind...which, as they describe it, simply is a another term for 'the universe' (simply seen from a subjective viewpoint). This is no different. Yet if idealism refers to something metaphysical, which cannot be observed to exist yet can be observed to exist...I think it becomes a paradox which cannot be support. And is therefore different to materialism.
Athon