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Final proof that Stimpson J Cat is wrong

Loki said:


Well, first off I was referring to Idealism's "purpose for the existence of the universe", not "purpose for the existence of consciousness".

Do you mean the physical universe or at least what idealism refers to as the illusion of a physical univserse ?


Why don't I think "it just is" is acceptable under Idealism to 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.

Mystics and Hindu types claim to have experienced this through deep meditation. They cannot describe it, which is a shame but I think expected since qualia are only amenable to ostensive definitions (eg redness). So of there is nothing remotely similar to the feeling of "pure" Consciousness then you would have no hope of describing it to someone else. Perhaps you should try becoming a Hindu ;)


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.

I don't understand. Could you elaborate ?
 
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?


Hammegk,

I don't really understand what you're getting at when you say the question must be "what is the difference between life and non-life".

What is the relevance between the nature of consciousness and the criteria that we apply to our definitions of a living or dead entity ?
 
davidsmith,

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.

Any number of assumptions could account for the fact that, up till now, science has seemed to work. Such assumptions may or may not imply that science will continue to work, and will work for all observable phenomena.

The scientific framework I have presented is the minimal set of assumptions necessary to logically derive the scientific method. The assumption that reality is objective is one necessary assumption in that framework. So is the assumption that reality functions according to consistent logical rules, and the assumption that those rules can, in principle, be derived from our observations.

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.
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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.

The very idea of trying to demonstrate that an axiom is valid, is nonsensical. If you could do that it would not be an axiom.

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.

That's the whole point. The purpose of science is to understand the world around us. If you simply assume that there is no World, and only your experiences, then there is nothing there to be understood.

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.
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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.

How can we apply the scientific method if we don't assume that there are rules for science to find? Once again, this assumption is an axiom. Nobody is claiming that it can be proven!

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.
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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.

That is just semantics. Either way, the fact remains that you are assuming the existence of more than just your experiences, regardless of whether that additional stuff is assumed to be part of your mind, or something else entirely.

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.
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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 !

I mean quite simply that science makes predictions about what we expect to observe. Those predictions are testable. Science can be clearly and unambiguously demonstrated to work. If it did not, then that would falsify the axioms of science. None of them individually can be falsified, but the framework can.

That is how it works with any scientific theory. The individual claims of the theory, taken out of context, cannot be falsified, because you could always invent ad-hoc explanations for why the predictions of the theory failed. But the theory as a whole is falsifiable.

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.
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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).

Once again, without a sound logical framework from which the scientific method can be logically derived, there is no logical way for us to model the relationships between our observations. It is simply not logically possible to do this without making some assumptions about the nature of those relationships.

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

Irrelevant semantics. It doesn't make any difference whether you claim it is part of consciousness or not. It is still something more than just our experiences.

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.

In other words, you are assuming that there is more to it than just the experiences. You are also making assumptions about its nature.

You can't get around the assumption of objectivity. Any statement of the form "This is how things are" has a built in assumption of objectivity.

Even idealism assumes the existence of an objective reality. It just makes the additional assumptions about the nature of that reality.

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.
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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.

If there is nothing more to your mind than what you have direct conscious access to, and everything that exists is part of your mind, then it is not possible for there to be anything that you do not know. Surely you are not claiming to be omniscient?

Like I said before, there must be more to reality that just your experiences for there to be any knowledge about reality for science to provide you with.

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.
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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.

If there is a difference between "Experience", and your experiences, then you are assuming the existence of something beyond just your experiences. You are assuming objectivity.


Dr. Stupid
 
davidsmith73 said:

Hammegk,

I don't really understand what you're getting at when you say the question must be "what is the difference between life and non-life".

What is the relevance between the nature of consciousness and the criteria that we apply to our definitions of a living or dead entity ?
And I don't understand your inability to see what, to me, is an unbreakable chain from first living "what-is" to human consciousness. Life vs non-life is the biggest hurdle imo.


Paul & C4ts: When do you plan to quit your day jobs & try stand-up comedy? :D

The question to be answered is "mind" vs "matter". In your examples, "something" is thinking. No I will never know if I'm just "its" dream. Axiomatically, and heeding TLOP as we currently model it, I chose *I* as most parsimonious, and by further axiom agree *you* also think.

[Stimpy]: I agree with everything you stated in the post above answering davidsmith, but your comments offer no help in the decision of mind vs matter. For science the answer is (currently)irrelevant.
 
Hammegk said:
The question to be answered is "mind" vs "matter". In your examples, "something" is thinking. No I will never know if I'm just "its" dream. Axiomatically, and heeding TLOP as we currently model it, I chose *I* as most parsimonious, and by further axiom agree *you* also think.
That's fine, but you need a mechanism to cause us both to think we experience more or less the same "external reality." As Stimpy keeps saying, you needs an objectifier.

~~ Paul
 
davidsmith73 said:


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 ;) )
Thanks for your explanation. I'll ask you the same follow-up question as I asked hammegk: how would someone go about testing this explanation of consciousness through experimentation?

Thanks,
treborf
 
Hammegk,

I agree with everything you stated in the post above answering davidsmith, but your comments offer no help in the decision of mind vs matter. For science the answer is (currently)irrelevant.

That is why I reject the distinction as meaningless.

We have to make certain assumptions about the nature of reality in order to construct a framework for understanding it (science). I see no point in making any further assumptions. If a question cannot, even in principle, be answered by science, then I am quite content to simply say "I don't know", and move onto something that actually matters.

Quite simply, I don't care whether reality is ontologically "material", or ontologically "mental", or even if its true nature is pluralistic. It simply doesn't make any difference. I have no way of knowing, and even if I did know, that knowledge would not provide any practical benefit.

What's more, when you think about it, any speculation we make about things which we have no information about, is almost certainly doomed to be wrong. Simply guessing something unknowable, and believing it is true, is nothing more than monumental over-optimism, and wishful thinking.

Dr. Stupid
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:

That's fine, but you need a mechanism to cause us both to think we experience more or less the same "external reality." As Stimpy keeps saying, you needs an objectifier.

~~ Paul

Umm, the only "thing" *I* can effect/affect is the neural system in *me*. The Laws of "What-Is" seem to handle the objectivity problem.

However the effect/affect does can carry forward to the perceived world, via *my* thought (&faith) carried forward to words & acts. I.E. "Faith" can move mountains -- some organization & machines would make it easier (for *me* ;) ).
 
Stimpy, before we go any further with this debate, I would like to know your definition of "objective" please.
 
davidsmith,

Stimpy, before we go any further with this debate, I would like to know your definition of "objective" please.

Anything which exists independently of your awareness of it. Note that this does not rule out the possibility that you may be a part of objective reality. In fact, the fact that you interact with the rest of objective reality implies that you are a part of it.

Dr. Stupid
 
davidsmith73,

Mystics and Hindu types claim to have experienced this through deep meditation. They cannot describe it, ... So of there is nothing remotely similar to the feeling of "pure" Consciousness then you would have no hope of describing it to someone else. Perhaps you should try becoming a Hindu
Yes, well, a mystic telling me he has experienced something that he cannot describe doesn't exactly overwhelm me with confidence that his experience was "the true nature of consciousness". I'll pass on the offer of Hinduism for now.

don't understand. Could you elaborate ?
I'm not sure! How else to express it?....Hmmm...*all* my experiece with consciousness has shown me that there is "intent" whenever a consciousness "creates". SO there was an "intent" behind the creation of the "illusion of a physical universe" under Idealism. So "just is" doesn't cut it as an explanation - which leaves : Why did the Uberconsciousness(es) create the illusion of a physciual universe? I don't expect you or anyone else to be able top answer that question, which says to me that Idealism raises a question that it can't answer. Not so under materialism - "just is" is perfectly acceptable.
 
Yes, the "just is" would be the answer to "Why does the Ubermind exist?" ;)

But Loki, if I was to ask you "Why are the laws of the universe the way they are?" Wouldn't you find "they just are like that" acceptable?

So why can't an Idealist say to the question "Why does the Ubermind act as it does?" with "the laws of the mind of the Ubermind 'just are'"?

In my opinion there are no satisfactory answers from either side to these types of questions. I have doubts there evn can be.

Adam
 
Slim, you & I agree on that, anyway. Hope that doesn't worry you too much. :D

Back to a basic question for homo sap (and least some other lifeforms) at the higher/highest levels of intellect:

Is "thought" a function of brain activity, or

Is brain activity a function of "thought"?

Which answer leads to the fewest logical inconsistencies -- there are a fair number of somewhat similar questions imo -- in your mind?
 
slimshady2357,

So why can't an Idealist say to the question "Why does the Ubermind act as it does?" with "the laws of the mind of the Ubermind 'just are'"?
Sure, the "Ubermind" can just be I guess - but under idealism the ubermind creates the (illusion of a) real physical universe. Again, this creation is an act of teh Ubermind - therefore, it reflects the intent of the Ubermind. So I find "just is" to be somewhat contradictory - we have a Ubermind sufficiently powerful to generate "billions and billions" os starts, etc into existence, but we are to assume it did this for no reason? It's possible - I';m just saying that I find it "contrary" to the nature of an Ubermind to suppose that it wold act without a reason.

In my opinion there are no satisfactory answers from either side to these types of questions. I have doubts there evn can be
Yes, I agree there are no answers here. And I agree it may remain that way. I was simply offering what seems to me to be a "reasonable default position" about why there is a physcial universe (or an illusion of such) - under materialism, "just is" seems fine. Under Idealism "just is" seems to go against the flow of the concept of a conscious creator. I think Idealism stringly implies "because...", but then has no way to answer it. Materialism doesn't require a "because..."
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
davidsmith,


The scientific framework I have presented is the minimal set of assumptions necessary to logically derive the scientific method. The assumption that reality is objective is one necessary assumption in that framework. So is the assumption that reality functions according to consistent logical rules, and the assumption that those rules can, in principle, be derived from our observations.


The assumption that reality is objective is indeed needed to logically derive the scientific method as a method for obtaining objective knowledge. Without this assumption, we can perfectly well continue the two step process of theory and observation. However, the knowledge gained would not be about an objective reality, rather it would simply be a description of particular experiential relationships we find existing within the realm of Consciousness.



That's the whole point. The purpose of science is to understand the world around us. If you simply assume that there is no World, and only your experiences, then there is nothing there to be understood.


The purpose of science holding the assumption of an objective reality is to understand the "world around us", because the "world around us" contains that very assumption. If there is no objective reality then science becomes a method for describing particular experiential relationships we find existing within the realm of Consciousness.



How can we apply the scientific method if we don't assume that there are rules for science to find?


observation and theory. One is a description of the other. You do not have to assume that the theory is describing a separate ontological realm to the realm from which you compare your theoretical description.


That is just semantics.

I must object to your habit of using this phrase. Semantics is very important to this debate because a large part of it is the discussion of particular meanings of words. A debate would get very far if we were debating two different things.



Either way, the fact remains that you are assuming the existence of more than just your experiences, regardless of whether that additional stuff is assumed to be part of your mind, or something else entirely.


I disagree here. And this is where semantics is important. The word "mind" can mean quite different things depending on who you are talking to. The way you have used it above, I would assume you are talking about it in the same sense as your individual consciousness. Individual consciousness clearly lies in the realm of Experience. In that sense, if we assume the existence of something outside of the realm of Experience then that additional stuff cannot by definition be part of your mind. So what you have said above is a contradiction.


I mean quite simply that science makes predictions about what we expect to observe. Those predictions are testable. Science can be clearly and unambiguously demonstrated to work. If it did not, then that would falsify the axioms of science. None of them individually can be falsified, but the framework can.


So by "work" you mean that a theory (which makes descriptive predictions within a logical framework) matches observations. In other words, certain observations fall into the category of forming roughly logical and consistent relationships to other observations. The assumption of objectivity does not have to come into it.



Once again, without a sound logical framework from which the scientific method can be logically derived, there is no logical way for us to model the relationships between our observations. It is simply not logically possible to do this without making some assumptions about the nature of those relationships.


Show me how it is not possible for us to model the relationships between our observations without the assumption of objectivity. Describing relationships between your observations does not need the assumption of objectivity.



Me: 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.

Stimpy: Irrelevant semantics. It doesn't make any difference whether you claim it is part of consciousness or not. It is still something more than just our experiences.


:eek: Of course it makes a difference if you claim it is part of consciousness or not. Consciousness is the realm that objectivity is claimed to be ontologically separate from ! If your experience of the thing is the thing then there is nothing outside that realm of existence.


Me: 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.

Stimpy: In other words, you are assuming that there is more to it than just the experiences. You are also making assumptions about its nature.

You can't get around the assumption of objectivity. Any statement of the form "This is how things are" has a built in assumption of objectivity.

Even idealism assumes the existence of an objective reality. It just makes the additional assumptions about the nature of that reality.


Clearly not true. Refer to your definition of objectivity:

Anything which exists independently of your awareness of it.

I haven't made any assumption of there being more to reality than Consciousness. Any individual experience is manifest within this realm. Objectivity assumes the existence of a separate realm to the one within which experiences such as redness are contained.


Me: 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.


Stimpy: If there is nothing more to your mind than what you have direct conscious access to, and everything that exists is part of your mind, then it is not possible for there to be anything that you do not know. Surely you are not claiming to be omniscient?

Like I said before, there must be more to reality that just your experiences for there to be any knowledge about reality for science to provide you with.


Everything that exists is not part of your mind. Its the other way round. Your mind is part of Consciousness. Your mind is defined as what you experience within a certain time frame. For example, right now I am not experiencing pain. Pain is not part of my mind right, but the contents of my mind at any moment is not equivalent to reality.


If there is a difference between "Experience", and your experiences, then you are assuming the existence of something beyond just your experiences. You are assuming objectivity.

No. Objectivity = anything which exists independently of your awareness of it. It is a realm beyond the realm of Experience. Your experiences (collectively termed your mind) are within this single realm. The single realm of Experience does not exist independently from your individual experiences.

Consider what I am saying from the perspective of materialism. In the same sense as above there could be said to be a difference between an electron and the fundamental objective reality. However you would not say that the electron exists independently from this fundamental reality. The electron is part of it.
 
davidsmith,

The assumption that reality is objective is indeed needed to logically derive the scientific method as a method for obtaining objective knowledge. Without this assumption, we can perfectly well continue the two step process of theory and observation. However, the knowledge gained would not be about an objective reality, rather it would simply be a description of particular experiential relationships we find existing within the realm of Consciousness.

What is this "realm of consciousness" of which you speak? If it includes more than just your actual experiences, then it is something which objectively exists, and knowledge about it is objective knowledge.

How can we apply the scientific method if we don't assume that there are rules for science to find?
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observation and theory. One is a description of the other. You do not have to assume that the theory is describing a separate ontological realm to the realm from which you compare your theoretical description.

I am not making any claims about ontological separateness of experiences and reality. on the contrary, I freely acknowledge that our experiences are a part of objective reality.

Either way, the fact remains that you are assuming the existence of more than just your experiences, regardless of whether that additional stuff is assumed to be part of your mind, or something else entirely.
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I disagree here. And this is where semantics is important. The word "mind" can mean quite different things depending on who you are talking to. The way you have used it above, I would assume you are talking about it in the same sense as your individual consciousness. Individual consciousness clearly lies in the realm of Experience. In that sense, if we assume the existence of something outside of the realm of Experience then that additional stuff cannot by definition be part of your mind. So what you have said above is a contradiction.

Nonsense. There is more to your own consciousness than just your experiences. Simply defining "realm of experience" to include that extra stuff, does not change the fact that it objectively exists.

Once again, without a sound logical framework from which the scientific method can be logically derived, there is no logical way for us to model the relationships between our observations. It is simply not logically possible to do this without making some assumptions about the nature of those relationships.
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Show me how it is not possible for us to model the relationships between our observations without the assumption of objectivity. Describing relationships between your observations does not need the assumption of objectivity.

I have already explained this. There has to be more to reality that just our experiences. Even if you just look at science as modeling our experiences, you have to first assume that there are reasons why we experience the things we do. There has to be more to it than just the experience, or there is nothing there for science to tell us.

Me: 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 hhaas not been supervened.

Stimpy: Irrelevant semantics. It doesn't make any difference whether you claim it is part of consciousness or not. It is still something more than just our experiences.
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Of course it makes a difference if you claim it is part of consciousness or not. Consciousness is the realm that objectivity is claimed to be ontologically separate from ! If your experience of the thing is the thing then there is nothing outside that realm of existence.

I never said anything about ontological separateness. That is dualism. I am not a dualist, and science in no way has anything to do with dualism.

Our experiences are not ontologically separate from objective reality. They are a part of objective reality.

Even idealism assumes the existence of an objective reality. It just makes the additional assumptions about the nature of that reality.
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Clearly not true. Refer to your definition of objectivity:

Anything which exists independently of your awareness of it.

I haven't made any assumption of there being more to reality than Consciousness. Any individual experience is manifest within this realm.

I said your awareness of it, not consciousness. Idealism implicitly assumes that there is more to your consciousness than just what you are aware of.

Objectivity assumes the existence of a separate realm to the one within which experiences such as redness are contained.

No, that is dualism. Objectivity only assumes that there is more to reality than just what you are aware of.

Everything that exists is not part of your mind. Its the other way round. Your mind is part of Consciousness. Your mind is defined as what you experience within a certain time frame. For example, right now I am not experiencing pain. Pain is not part of my mind right, but the contents of my mind at any moment is not equivalent to reality.

That is a claim of objective reality. You are claiming that consciousness objectively exists.

In fact, all you are doing is renaming reality to be "consciousness", and then misapply some vague definition of subjectivity to claim that reality is not objective.

One does not have to be a dualist to believe in objective reality. One must simply accept that there is more to reality than just your experiences. Monistic philosophies like Idealism and Materialism both do this. Neither of those philosophies claim that there is an objective realm separate from a subjective realm. They both hold that everything is part of one realm, and that this one realm contains more than just your experiences.

Of course, one need not make any assumptions about ontological realms. All you need to do is reject Solipsism, which means accepting that there is more to reality than just your experiences.

Dr. Stupid
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:

One does not have to be a dualist to believe in objective reality.
Odd, we agree on that. :D


One must simply accept that there is more to reality than just your experiences. Monistic philosophies like Idealism and Materialism both do this. Neither of those philosophies claim that there is an objective realm separate from a subjective realm. They both hold that everything is part of one realm, and that this one realm contains more than just your experiences.
Amazingly, we agree again!


Of course, one need not make any assumptions about ontological realms.
True, but philosophy & logic invite one to examine both monist positions for inconsistencies.


All you need to do is reject Solipsism, which means accepting that there is more to reality than just your experiences.
Dr. Stupid
Damn. Agreement again.

How would prove, or disprove that you, or I, are "different" from all else. I'm still stuck on that prudent "gentlemens' agreement"; we are all alike, "thinking".
 
Hammegk,

Of course, one need not make any assumptions about ontological realms.
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True, but philosophy & logic invite one to examine both monist positions for inconsistencies.

Examine them all you want, but logic will never be able to tell you which, if either of them, is correct.

All you need to do is reject Solipsism, which means accepting that there is more to reality than just your experiences.
Dr. Stupid
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Damn. Agreement again.

How would prove, or disprove that you, or I, are "different" from all else. I'm still stuck on that prudent "gentlemens' agreement"; we are all alike, "thinking".

There's the problem. You are looking for proof. When it comes to proof, you are always going to be disappointed. At some point you have to simply acknowledge that proof is not obtainable, and settle for evidence instead.

Once you accept that axioms of science (objectivity, logical rules, and empiricism), the theory that you are just another person is a falsifiable theory. You don't need to have faith, or accept any "gentlemen's agreement". There is plenty of supporting evidence.

Dr. Stupid
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
davidsmith,

What is this "realm of consciousness" of which you speak? If it includes more than just your actual experiences, then it is something which objectively exists, and knowledge about it is objective knowledge.


The realm of Consciousness doesn't exist independently of your experience of it. Every single experience we have is a manifestation of this reality.



I am not making any claims about ontological separateness of experiences and reality. on the contrary, I freely acknowledge that our experiences are a part of objective reality.


In that case your definition of objectivity is contradictory. You say objectivity = anything existing (ontology) independently (separate) from your experience of it. This is clearly a claim about the ontological separateness of objective reality from experience.
Perhaps you want to change your definition ;)



Nonsense. There is more to your own consciousness than just your experiences. Simply defining "realm of experience" to include that extra stuff, does not change the fact that it objectively exists.

Objectivity = anything that exists independently from your experience of it.

The single realm of Consciousness does not objectively exist. It is experiential by definition. Every experience we have is a manifestation of Consciousness and this is the only existence there is.



I never said anything about ontological separateness. That is dualism. I am not a dualist, and science in no way has anything to do with dualism.

Our experiences are not ontologically separate from objective reality. They are a part of objective reality.


Like I said, this makes your definition of objectivity meaningless. Your definition of objectivity cannot get away from dualism and the hard problem results.



I said your awareness of it, not consciousness. Idealism implicitly assumes that there is more to your consciousness than just what you are aware of.

This "just what you are aware of" is a bit unclear to me. If I am just aware of red and yellow right now is green going to be classed as "more than I am aware of" ?



Objectivity only assumes that there is more to reality than just what you are aware of.


No, you said that objectivity assumes that something existsindependently of your experience of it.

That is dualism. Try again at a definition ?


That is a claim of objective reality. You are claiming that consciousness objectively exists.

No. Consciousness is contained within every single experience we have. If there is no Consciousness then there are no experiences. There is no reason to assume that Consciousness exists separately from any experience because such a concept is meaningless. If you want to picture a Venn diagram, any individual experience is a small circle within the larger circle of Consciousness. So Consciousness is not separate from any experience, rather any experience is a manifestation of Consciousness.



One does not have to be a dualist to believe in objective reality. One must simply accept that there is more to reality than just your experiences.


Objectivity assumes that something existsindependently of your experience of it.

Dualism


Monistic philosophies like Idealism and Materialism both do this. Neither of those philosophies claim that there is an objective realm separate from a subjective realm. They both hold that everything is part of one realm, and that this one realm contains more than just your experiences.


What do you mean by "more than just your experiences" ?

If this is not an ontological claim then what kind of claim is it ?
 

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