Stimpson J. Cat
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2001
- Messages
- 1,949
A point about Solipsism.
If you take Solipsism to be the position that nothing exists except your own mind, then naturally before you can assess whether it is true or not, you must have a definition of existence.
If you define existence in such a way that things which clearly affect you (like the pointy objects is Hans' example) don't exist, as you would have to in order for Solipsism to not be trivially false, then all this means is that you have invented a totally pointless, and really stupid, definition of existence.
Unfortunately, most so-called philosophers don't ever bother to define what they mean by "existence". They simply take as granted a vague, intuitive notion of "ontological existence". Solipsism fails as a coherent philosophical position for exactly the same reason any other ontological philosophy (metaphysic) does. It is incoherent because it takes as the fundamental basis for the entire framework a concept which is not, and can not be, coherently defined.
In other words, the question is not whether we can prove Solipsism is false, or even whether it is possible to prove it false. The relevant question is: does it actually mean anything at all to say that it is true?
I say it does not.
Dr. Stupid
If you take Solipsism to be the position that nothing exists except your own mind, then naturally before you can assess whether it is true or not, you must have a definition of existence.
If you define existence in such a way that things which clearly affect you (like the pointy objects is Hans' example) don't exist, as you would have to in order for Solipsism to not be trivially false, then all this means is that you have invented a totally pointless, and really stupid, definition of existence.
Unfortunately, most so-called philosophers don't ever bother to define what they mean by "existence". They simply take as granted a vague, intuitive notion of "ontological existence". Solipsism fails as a coherent philosophical position for exactly the same reason any other ontological philosophy (metaphysic) does. It is incoherent because it takes as the fundamental basis for the entire framework a concept which is not, and can not be, coherently defined.
In other words, the question is not whether we can prove Solipsism is false, or even whether it is possible to prove it false. The relevant question is: does it actually mean anything at all to say that it is true?
I say it does not.
Dr. Stupid