That explains the sheep...
Which really means bugger all when you think about it since it starts with an assumption "I am the solipsist". The solipsist has no way of knowing whether they are the solipsist or not she just assumes she is.
Ah. Interesting. I think you’re right – but doesn’t this just mean that even solipsism isn’t free from metaphysics? Even the solipsist has to assert that they exist, at which point they become a metaphysical entity (the only one in the universe, granted, but still…)
Yes in the sense that metaphysics means nothing more than acknowledging that everything we do is based on axioms.
The metaphysical can be represented physically.
How, exactly?
And what do you mean by 'the metaphysical'?
You recently acheived this feat utilising a series of electronic pulses
Nope. Metaphysics is about that which applies to the physical. Which is different. Non-physical attributes, such as truth, can apply to physical objects. Please physically manifest 'truth' for me in the absence of a true statement. Please describe the physical nature of 'existence' in the absence of an object that exists.That which is about the physical.
‘Nothing more than?’ Really? Personally, as a skeptic, I find the fact that even the most modest, practical philosophical outlook can’t escape making assertions that transcend observable reality a pretty large thing to deal with.
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Is there any way (beyond the sterile route of solipsism) to ‘minimise’ such statements?
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Is there any reason for doing so? Are there ‘better’ or ‘worse’ assertions to make (e.g. what, if anything, is wrong with the weaker forms of theism?)
All of these seem to me to be useful, interesting metaphysical topics for discussion.
Not following you. What metaphysics did I make visible?
Nope. Metaphysics is about that which applies to the physical. Which is different.
Non-physical attributes, such as truth, can apply to physical objects.
Please physically manifest 'truth' for me in the absence of a true statement. Please describe the physical nature of 'existence' in the absence of an object that exists.
Applying truth to physical objects is talking about them surely?.
Please talk metaphysically without being physical about it.
No. It's talking about the properties that they have - which are not physical objects.
Is your point really, honestly, that metaphysics can't exist because we have to use words (which are physical objects) to discuss it?
Because that really is rather facile. The fact that I apply a word to something doesn't mean that the thing itself is necessarily physical.
What is the physical manifestation of 'and'?
I'm asking you to indicate the changes in the sentence that will reflect this change.
But we've already had that debate endlessly with Interesting Ian and Undercover Elephant, may they rest in peace.
But he didn't do it consciously, because he certainly didn't keep the state of the world constantly in mind while going about his business. So he did it nonconsciously. But why should the solipsist assume that this nonconscious maintenance of the state of the world is going on in his head? He has no evidence of that. It could just as well be maintained by something other than himself.Matt said:Answering those questions in order: 1) Why shouldn't it be? 2) He did.
But the solipsist exists, so according to that he has a metaphsic from the get-go. In any event, I think this hiddent agent who maintains the state of the world blows off any claim that nothing exists but the solipsist.Look, I'm not a solipsist. But I do acknowledge that it is an absolutely unassailable logical position, and what I'm arguing is that it's the only one that could honestly be said to preclude having a metaphysics. If something exists, then that something has at least one necessary property (existence) - and necessary properties are metaphysical entities.
Sounds fine to me.Your own definition of things that are 'real' gives rise, as all non-solipsist thinking does, to a metaphysical conclusion. Imagine an entity that was being affected by things but briefly enters a state where nothing is affecting it. By your definition it stops being real. At which point, again by your own definition, nothing can ever affect it again - it can never return to reality.
Interesting, but I'm not sure I care. Let things disappear from reality. How would I ever know?A thing therefore has to be continually affected by other things - and by continually I mean literally continually. If, for a Planck second, it is not subject to some influence, it disappears from your universe, never to return.
As far as I can see, this means that your 'non-metaphysical' outlook requires the highly speculative, highly metaphysical condition of infinitessimally continuous time to work at all.
I'm glad to hear that. Which forum?DreamLizard said:I am a great friend of Interesting Ian, you can be assured he's very much alive and participating in what he feels is a more conducive forum.
But the solipsist exists, so according to that he has a metaphsic from the get-go. In any event, I think this hiddent agent who maintains the state of the world blows off any claim that nothing exists but the solipsist.
Interesting, but I'm not sure I care. Let things disappear from reality. How would I ever know?
I expect no change - the truth is not in the sentence to begin with.