Yes, I think we have covered this now.
How do we compare the results from the introspection of different observers?
The same way we do everything through communication.
Different peopel do report different results from instrospection. But that is abroad etrm we may need to narrow it.
Surely we define the results in terms of the data that we observe in order to communicate them?
yes but it can be very hard to establish metric of the qualitative nature of introspection, such as "It was beautiful."
In which case I don't see a problem here.
The issue is that there is little consistency between the tintrospective reports of different observers. Some patterns are found but it is difficult to form a theory based upon them, that would be the issue.
that and that different events seem to have a wide variety of introspective ersults. Future theories may have the pwoer to resolve them.
I think that
behaviorsim already does. But that is an opinion not shared by many.
Confirmation bias is just terminology to describe one of the results of this processes on the way to a definition which we can communicate.
It is a little more specific than that:
It is a statement about tehs elf reinforcing nature of beliefs. If an entity only retains the data that confirms their belief and disregards the data that contradicts thier beleif, then it might be possible that analysis of the data shows there is no corrwelation.
The point of introspection is to realise how we organise and interpret the data and systematize this .
Well, that is one of the things that happens yes.
This is all very well, but it does not tell us anything about the relationship between inner and outer reality.
They are the same, in all cases humans have interior (or self referencing models) of the action of themselves, reality and the role of themselves in that reality. the models are about different ways of organizing human thoughst and the body is the common boundary between them in human thoughts. Now there are forces which interpenetrate the body (like gravity).
But the human brain (whatever that is) set up these models and events that sort of and try to organise the events of perception. However some of them seem to have little ability to predict the behavior of the reality that is not the body.
In that a confabulated memory of a large sum of money in the bank account is going to be invalid to making with drawls from teh bank.
It just assumes that there are two kinds of reality. One personal, one a consistent model. It is in my opinion a form of dualism. This is the problem that arises if we do not recognize the nature of thinking. It is not finished until the subject and object is reconciled as they were before thinking starts.
The issue is the organic nature of the brain and associative learning, as well as social, personal and cultural convention.
I don't see it as a dualism, but then I am not you. I see it as models of communication within the organic brain, some seem to be spurious or invalid to the nature of the world of which they are a part.
Someone on this forum (I cannot remember exactly were) someone mentioned that this is the nature of the human condition, perhaps due to an evolutionary advantage, to think of themselves as a subject.
It is more of a cultural convention, running through the dichotomy of hellenism and going to Zoroaster and beyond. there are net theories as well of organization, and multifacted pluralistc appraoches. Dualism is not inherent, it seems to be social.
Now the belief that the body is an idependant unit in the world is probably a result of not having sensations outside the body.
I tend to agree. I think that it gives us the ability to be free. Whether it is an illusion or not is irrelevant since it is not what we hypothesize of freedom passively that counts, but what we actively do when we reconcile the subject/concept with the object/percept by means of cognition. The thing-in-itself is not given in cognition as such it is what cognition makes of it. Yes this freedom comes with a price. The possibility of error, but that is why we can change our minds

I think it is the fear of error which creates dogma but we need not fear if we learn to trust our thinking, by embracing it wholeheartedly instead of ignoring it as a consequence of matter and therefore expecting to find an explanation of thinking in matter.
I am not afraid, I have already learned that free will may be an illsuion and that i am not a self.
You show me a way outside of matter that is not dualsim and that is great. So far I haven't seen a way to distinguish idealism from materialsim. I can always change my mind.
I do not think it is a necessary axiom. What difference would it make to the scientific method if it weren't?
Then we would not have the symetries of physics and the alpha fine constant would vary.
And the differences if predictable would not matter.
More later.
Why do we have to make assumptions about something that is unknown?
Why does the unknown need properties before it becomes known?
Is it now good enough to get to know something by its properties?
We would only know if something was inconsistent by using the scientific method in the first place.
If you reject the need for the consistency axiom, why does this imply that we would automatically only discover inconsistency?
Why is memory not good enough?
Do you think we might forget what we know about something unless it had some form of axiomatic existence?
How is the pondering going?
Sure, if we need axioms of existence in order to trust our perception then the world will be an appearance. It will be an idol.