Bodhi Dharma Zen
Advaitin
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2004
- Messages
- 3,926
Fine.
Why should I consider that there is anything but material entities when I see no evidence of anything that isn't a material entity?
How it is 'blind faith' to take a materialistic stand-point when considering the existence of non-material entities makes no difference to my actions?
What is the merit of considering the unknowable?
Im still unsure about what you are talking about. Have you read the definition of "naive realism" in wikipedia? How does that position differs from yours?
You assume a particular entity before your eyes, you assume that such entity is something concrete, with determinate qualities, and you assume it exists beyond your own mind. Then you choose to call it a "material object", later you do experiments, to determine its weight, how it reflects electromagnetic waves and so on.
If I tell you that what you see is a butterfly dream, what changes? It will reflect EM and weight exactly the same. Its just its "final composition" what I claim is different. What changes? (other than obviously this imagined "final substance").