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Final proof that Stimpson J Cat is wrong

I think we should keep the argument down to logical nuggets.

So when "Interesting" makes a statement "Materialism says..." then we can immediately fill in the rest of the statement:

"Materialism says...." /a statement follows which contradicts the modern philosphical understanding of materialism/ is constructed as a straw man argument / cannot be logically refuted because no logic entered the argument to begin with.

"Materialists believe..." /a statement which would not or could not be made logically by materialists / a straw man argument / cannot be used as a justification for any other philosophical alternative / a troll statement designed to bait threads or posters who should know better

"Consciousness is..." /an entity specifically described to be inaccessible to scientific disproof / a modern version of animistic belief in disembodied spirits / a meaningless argument designed to defy rational argument

"I have disproved materialism" or "Materialism is demonstrably false because..." / because I am an egotistical drunken wanker with lots of keyboard time / everyone can go round a circular argument an infinite number of times / I desperately need attention for my lack of achievement in this concept I deny: Real Life
 
Loki,

----
quote:
The physical universe serves no "necessary purpose" under materialism - it "just is". If consciousness arises from this state, and seeks "purpose" then there is no conflict. But under idealism, what purpose does the universe serve? How can you decide amongst the endless stream of potential alternatives?
----

I strongly disagree; materialism does not make any statement about that; it's perfectly possible under a materialist framework that the universe we know is designed by some entity to serve a purpose... But it's not very probable.
Let's not confuse current knowledge with speculation and extrapolation...
 
Loki said:
hammegk,


The physical universe serves no "necessary purpose" under materialism - it "just is". If consciousness arises from this state, and seeks "purpose" then there is no conflict. But under idealism, what purpose does the universe serve? How can you decide amongst the endless stream of potential alternatives?

Loki,

Why does idealism have to provide a purpose for the existence of consciousness ?

If materialism provides an "it just is" answer to why the objective universe exists then its just as acceptable for idealism to do the same for the experiential universe, surely.
 
David, I agree that idealism can say "it just is." What I don't understand is why idealism would bother with the appearance of external consistency. I suppose "why not" is a perfectly good answer. But then, why bother with metaphysics at all?

~~ Paul
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
Ian,


Anyway, the hypothesis I make is that an external objective reality exists. This is a very parsimonious position, and here is why.

First of all, I think we can all agree that at the very least science (and thus naturalism) must assume that reality appears to be objective, in every observable way.


No I certainly do not agree ! Science deals with experiences that are quantitative, roughly logical, roughly consistent and roughly stable. From this you are assuming that reality is purely logical, stable and consistent. So in order for science to have anything to say about objective knowledge it must first assume the existence of objective reality from our observations, which is unfalsifiable. Can you not see the logical fallacy ?




Clearly the assumptions of naturalism imply that there is more to reality than just our perceptions, and furthermore that it must behave in all observable ways as though it were objective.

At this point, assuming that reality is objective does not involve postulating the existence of some external reality. It is nothing more acknowledging that reality being objective is the most parsimonious explanation for the fact that it behaves in every observable way as though it were.

What do you mean by objective then ? Assuming that reality is objective certainly means that you are assuming the existence of some external reality because that is what "objective" means !



See my above response to Ian. If reality behaves according to logical rules, and is objective, then there must be more to reality that just our experiences.

Ok thats fine. As long as you know that you have first made an unfalsifiable assumption that reality is indeed objective (i.e., separate from experience). And if you do this then of course an experiential reality does not work ! This is a logical fallacy based on an unfalsifiable premise. Also science can work just as well without this assumption. It just won't be giving us knowledge about an objective reality. It would be giving us knowledge about certain aspects of our experiences.


Even if (reality) is nothing more than some aspect of your own mind that you don't have direct conscious access to, it is still something beyond your experiences.

No it isn't !? If reality is experiential then its not beyond your experiences.


It is no less parsimonious to assume that this external reality is some objective reality of which you are just a part, then it is too assume that it is just some aspect of your own mind. In fact, it is far more parsimonious to do so, since that it exactly what the evidence seems to indicate is the case.

Again logical fallacy. The evidence you speak of is laden with the unfalsifiable assumption that reality is objective. Of course it will then follow that this evidence will indicate an objective reality !
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
David, I agree that idealism can say "it just is." What I don't understand is why idealism would bother with the appearance of external consistency. I suppose "why not" is a perfectly good answer. But then, why bother with metaphysics at all?

~~ Paul

Dealing with consistent logical experiences is the function of science, but I suppose the question that must be asked here is whether science can actually say anything about the true nature of reality, under an assumption of an objective reality or not.
 
Davidsmith73 or hammegk, do you agree with the mainstream scientific view that consciousness is a function of the brain? I think you don't, but can you please confirm this?

Thanks in advance.

treborf
 
treborf said:
....hammegk, do you agree with the mainstream scientific view that consciousness is a function of the brain? I think you don't, but can you please confirm this?

No I don't. I was a dualist most of my life (i.e. hadn't really thought about it) but I now lean towards idealism thanks to posters here.


Paul said:
....
What I don't understand is why idealism would bother with the appearance of external consistency.
One alternative imo is solipsism; even with Stimpy's help I still find that denying it is axiomatic rather than logical.

By denying solipsism external consistency is also axiomatic -- just as it is for materialists. Science works equally well under either axiom.
 
Davidsmith,

First of all, I think we can all agree that at the very least science (and thus naturalism) must assume that reality appears to be objective, in every observable way.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

No I certainly do not agree ! Science deals with experiences that are quantitative, roughly logical, roughly consistent and roughly stable. From this you are assuming that reality is purely logical, stable and consistent. So in order for science to have anything to say about objective knowledge it must first assume the existence of objective reality from our observations, which is unfalsifiable. Can you not see the logical fallacy ?

What is all of this "roughly" nonsense?

When I talk about the assumptions of science, I am not talking about the assumptions you must make to account for the fact that, so far, science has seemed to work pretty well. I am talking about the assumptions you must make in order to claim that the scientific method will work.

Objectivity is one of the axioms of science. You can apply the scientific method without making this assumption, but if you do so, then you are just treating it as a heuristic, not as an actual logical framework for understanding the world.

Clearly the assumptions of naturalism imply that there is more to reality than just our perceptions, and furthermore that it must behave in all observable ways as though it were objective.

At this point, assuming that reality is objective does not involve postulating the existence of some external reality. It is nothing more acknowledging that reality being objective is the most parsimonious explanation for the fact that it behaves in every observable way as though it were.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

What do you mean by objective then ? Assuming that reality is objective certainly means that you are assuming the existence of some external reality because that is what "objective" means !

Like I said, the very fact that reality functions according to logical rules, rules which we are not directly aware of, implies that there is more to reality than just our experiences. Even if you take the metaphysical view that reality is constructed by your mind, you are assuming the existence of some part of your mind which is external to your experiences.

See my above response to Ian. If reality behaves according to logical rules, and is objective, then there must be more to reality that just our experiences.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Ok thats fine. As long as you know that you have first made an unfalsifiable assumption that reality is indeed objective (i.e., separate from experience). And if you do this then of course an experiential reality does not work ! This is a logical fallacy based on an unfalsifiable premise.

No, it is not. The axioms of science, of which the claim that reality functions according to consistent logical rules is one, constitute a falsifiable hypothesis. Namely the hypothesis that science will work.

Also science can work just as well without this assumption. It just won't be giving us knowledge about an objective reality. It would be giving us knowledge about certain aspects of our experiences.

That is nonsensical. In order for the scientific method to give us any knowledge at all, there must be knowledge for it to give us. There must be facts about reality that it can reveal to us. In short, there must be more to reality than just our experiences.

Even if (reality) is nothing more than some aspect of your own mind that you don't have direct conscious access to, it is still something beyond your experiences.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

No it isn't !? If reality is experiential then its not beyond your experiences.

What part of the above did you not understand? If there is some aspect of your mind which you do not have direct conscious access to, then it is something beyond your experiences.

Even Idealism must posit the existence of something beyond your actual experiences, even if it only assumes that this something is just another part of your mind. To claim that reality is nothing more than your experiences, denies the idea that there is actually something having those experiences, and that there is something causing you to have those experiences (even if that cause is also a part of you).

Dr. Stupid
 
hammegk said:
Originally posted by treborf
....hammegk, do you agree with the mainstream scientific view that consciousness is a function of the brain? I think you don't, but can you please confirm this?

No I don't. I was a dualist most of my life (i.e. hadn't really thought about it) but I now lean towards idealism thanks to posters here.
Thanks for the answer. Since idealism doesn't see consciousness as a function of the brain, how does it explain consciousness? In other words, given a few sentences, in plain language, how would idealism complete the following: "Consciousness is __________________". What evidence is there for this explanation?

Thanks again.

treborf
 
davidsmith73/Peskanov,

(peskanov wrote) : I strongly disagree; materialism does not make any statement about that; it's perfectly possible under a materialist framework that the universe we know is designed by some entity to serve a purpose... But it's not very probable.
Oh well - the dangers of imprecise phrasing in philosphical discussions! What I meant was that under materialism, "it just is" is perfectly acceptable. I didn't mean to imply that "it just is" is required.

(davidsmith73 wrote) : Why does idealism have to provide a purpose for the existence of consciousness ?

If materialism provides an "it just is" answer to why the objective universe exists then its just as acceptable for idealism to do the same for the experiential universe, surely.
Well, first off I was referring to Idealism's "purpose for the existence of the universe", not "purpose for the existence of consciousness". Why don't I think "it just is" is acceptable under Idealismto explain the universe? Because Idealism posits that consciousness is the 'core'. Well, actually it's more accurate to say that Idealism posits that something that is in some way similar or related to what we perceive as consciousness here in the "real world" is the 'core'. As an aside, I find it sort of significant that *everything* that I consider to be my consciousness is in someway a reference to something in the "real world" - if the "real world" was taken away, or I try to imagine having never been exposed to the "real world", then I have a hard time thinking of what "consciousness" might be. The only consciousness that I'm personally aware of seems to be governed by time, and by cause and effect, and to be shaped entirely in response to the "real world".

But I'm wandering off track ... why aren't I comfortable with "it just is" under Idealism? Well, because it seems to me that (in the world I can see) consciousness that creates always has a purpose for that creation. The creation is to solve a problem, or to explore an idea. If the Uberconsciousness(es) of Idealism created this universe, and time, and the laws pf physics, it seems to me highly likely there was a purpose - it is/was to "solve a problem" or "explore an idea". "Just Is" seems somehow contradictory to the nature of consciousness, and therefore Idealism implies "because...". Of course, idealism cannot even begin to explain this "because...", even though it appears to be a necessary component of the theory. Well, that's how it seems to me!
 
treborf said:

"Consciousness is __________________".
Reading through what we've said so far, I need to explain that "consciousness" imo is for all intents & purposes "life". Animal Consciousness is a function of whatever perceived system (like a human brain) is available to perceive with.

Consciousness=life is the intent to exist as a perceiving entity -- in my case *me*, the "perceived/perceiving bag'o bones" that consciousness (*I*) has available to it.

To me, the more interesting question is, at what point do "energy" interactions become "live"? Is not the level of "what-is" currently postulated in one guise as Higgs Field a viable possibility? If not, why not?



What evidence is there for this explanation?
My one, indisputable, fact: that *I* think. ;)

And at a more basic level, Life "lives".
 
My one, indisputable, fact: that *I* think.
Hammegk, you refuse to consider the fact that your thoughts are merely projections by the invisible pink hamster orbiting Neptune. So *you* think, but that thinking is not *I*. The *I* is the hamster.

~~ Paul
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:

Hammegk, you refuse to consider the fact that your thoughts are merely projections by the invisible pink hamster orbiting Neptune. So *you* think, but that thinking is not *I*. The *I* is the hamster.

~~ Paul

Gah! Would you stop using "invisible pink" to describe your ludicrous examples?? I'm just pointing out that the hamster can't be pink in the same sense it is invisible. Color requires some sort of spectral reflectivity, something that invisible things can't have in order to remain invisible (unless it reflects a color we can't see, but pink isn't one of those colors)! I thought I explained this waaaaay back in another thread where somebody mentioned invisible pink unicorns.
 
The hamster is pink, but it is normally invisible. When it chooses to become visible, then it is pink. The invisibility is used to make it nonfalsifiable. It if were always pink, it would be slightly more falsifiable, which would render it useless as an example of a nonfalsifiable pink hamster.

Also, as has come to light since the discovery of the hamster, even when it is invisible, it is visible to certain select people. To them, it appears pink, as you would expect from the fact that it is an invisible pink hamster.

~~ Paul
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
The hamster is pink, but it is normally invisible. When it chooses to become visible, then it is pink. The invisibility is used to make it nonfalsifiable. It if were always pink, it would be slightly more falsifiable, which would render it useless as an example of a nonfalsifiable pink hamster.

Also, as has come to light since the discovery of the hamster, even when it is invisible, it is visible to certain select people. To them, it appears pink, as you would expect from the fact that it is an invisible pink hamster.

~~ Paul

Then call it the "selectively invisible pink hamster."
 
hammegk said:

Reading through what we've said so far, I need to explain that "consciousness" imo is for all intents & purposes "life". Animal Consciousness is a function of whatever perceived system (like a human brain) is available to perceive with.

Consciousness=life is the intent to exist as a perceiving entity -- in my case *me*, the "perceived/perceiving bag'o bones" that consciousness (*I*) has available to it.

To me, the more interesting question is, at what point do "energy" interactions become "live"? Is not the level of "what-is" currently postulated in one guise as Higgs Field a viable possibility? If not, why not?

[Evidence:]

My one, indisputable, fact: that *I* think. ;)

And at a more basic level, Life "lives".
Well, thanks for taking a crack at explaining it. From the words you choose, it sounds like you're saying that consciousness is separate from the body ("the 'perceived/perceiving bag'o bones' that consciousness has available to it"). Please correct me if I'm wrong. Can this hypothesis be tested through experimentation?
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
Davidsmith,

What is all of this "roughly" nonsense?

When I talk about the assumptions of science, I am not talking about the assumptions you must make to account for the fact that, so far, science has seemed to work pretty well. I am talking about the assumptions you must make in order to claim that the scientific method will work.


What is the difference between the assumptions you must make to account for the fact that, so far, science has seemed to work pretty well and the assumptions you must make in order to claim that the scientific method will work ? You have identified the latter (below) but not the former. The way I see it, both assumptions are one and the same.


Objectivity is one of the axioms of science. You can apply the scientific method without making this assumption, but if you do so, then you are just treating it as a heuristic, not as an actual logical framework for understanding the world.


Objectivity is indeed one of the axioms of science. However, we are trying to reach a conclusion as to whether this assumption of objectivity is valid. You can't use this assumption as a premise to then logically show how it is valid.

I agree you can apply the scientific method without the assumption of objectivity. And indeed if you do this you would not be able to use science as a framework for understanding the "world" but this "world" is the objective one.



Like I said, the very fact that reality functions according to logical rules, rules which we are not directly aware of, implies that there is more to reality than just our experiences.


That is not a fact. It is an assumption that is unfalsifiable. In reply to the "whats this roughly nonsense" comment, I am refering to the fact that no experience conforms to a consistent, stable and logical construction in an exact way. And claiming that its a fact that we are not directly aware of logical rules is again applying the assumption that these rules have an objective existence. Again, logical fallacy. In fact its plain to see that we are aware of these rules we contructed them in the first place.


Even if you take the metaphysical view that reality is constructed by your mind, you are assuming the existence of some part of your mind which is external to your experiences.

I have not taken the view that reality is constructed by your mind. Reality is Consciousness. The illusion of objective physical reality is constructed by your mind.



The axioms of science, of which the claim that reality functions according to consistent logical rules is one, constitute a falsifiable hypothesis. Namely the hypothesis that science will work.


How does this address what I said ? What do you mean by science "working". Do you mean these axioms will enable us to gain objective knowledge ? If so, then you have to first make the assumption of objectivity ! This is the assumption that we are trying to justify in the debate. You can't justify it by first making the assumption of objectivity and then show how science (which is based on this assumption) can give us knowledge about objective reality !



That is nonsensical. In order for the scientific method to give us any knowledge at all, there must be knowledge for it to give us.

Under idealism this must be knowledge about the relationships between aspects of our experience. Science works on forming relationships between observations. The debate here is whether we are justified in giving these relationships a separate ontological existence (objectivity) to the realm from which we extracted these relationships (Consciousness).


There must be facts about reality that it can reveal to us. In short, there must be more to reality than just our experiences.

Or there must be relationships within the realm of Consciousness that we are able to extract. We extract these relationships from experiences and they manifest within the realm of Consciousness. Consciousness has not been supervened.

note: I speak of Consciousness and Experience. I actually give the same meaning to each as a unified collective term, not any individual, isolated qualia such as redness. It is the quality of pure Consciousness that can be regarded as the nature of reality. it is the quality that is common to any individual experience we can identify.


What part of the above did you not understand? If there is some aspect of your mind which you do not have direct conscious access to, then it is something beyond your experiences.


Your statement doesn't make sense. Having an "aspect of your mind" you do not have "conscious access" to is a contradiction. Perhaps you could expand on your definition of "mind" and "conscious access" in this context. Remember that I am using Experience (I have given it a capital to avoid confusion) to mean a common quality to every individual experience we have. I'll also call that Consciousness. There would have to be something beyond Consciousness itself. An aspect of your mind is not beyond Consciousness even if it is a contructed logical framework.


Even Idealism must posit the existence of something beyond your actual experiences, even if it only assumes that this something is just another part of your mind.

There is a subtle distinction to what I'm saying. I'm saying there is nothing beyond Experience. Thats different to saying there is nothing beyond my experiences. My experiences change. Your "mind" changes and is not equivalent to Consciousness.
 
treborf said:
Thanks for the answer. Since idealism doesn't see consciousness as a function of the brain, how does it explain consciousness? In other words, given a few sentences, in plain language, how would idealism complete the following: "Consciousness is __________________". What evidence is there for this explanation?

Thanks again.

treborf [/B]

I believe I have already answered this at the top of page 5 ;)
 
treborf said:
Davidsmith73 or hammegk, do you agree with the mainstream scientific view that consciousness is a function of the brain? I think you don't, but can you please confirm this?

Thanks in advance.

treborf

I don't think Consciousness is a function of the brain. I do have a distinction to make between Consciousness itself and someones mind which is a set of identifiable experiences at a point in time. The way I can best describe Consciousness itself (at the moment) is to think about the quality that is common to every individual conscious exprience or feeling you have. For example, fear, redness, love, the smell of ◊◊◊◊. They all have one common quality which is that they manifest as a conscious experience. That base quality, Consciousness, I regard as the fundamental nature of reality. (At least for now ;) )
 

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