Hi Belz,
For sure. But what does it refer to? Please substantiate any answers you might give.
Sure. It refers to the speaker. In short, I'm sure you have no problem distinguishing a rock from another rock, so I don't understand why you have so much trouble distinguishing a person from another or a thought from somebody else's thoughts.
(pause...)
Can you see the problem now? The "I" is assumed by the mind to exist.
Belz, you're actually creating a non-sequitur here. You are assuming the subject-object divide when you use the word "I."
No, I'm not. Not any more than I'm assuming that a car has butt cheeks when I say "it's just sitting there!"
Now I am not saying don't communicate with personal pronouns! I'm not saying the ego is wrong! I'm saying that it cannot be substantiated.
You keep using different words. What do you mean by "ego", now ?
Belz, can you objectively substantiate the "I" perspective itself?
We know it exists in other people, so why is it so surprising that it exists in you ?
The consistency of experience, empiric validation, is of course a central aspect to ascribing objectivity. But without the divide it's pretty meaningless.
No, it's not. It has all the meaning in the world, whether or not the "I" exists, or whatever, or whether solipsism is true. That's why it's useless and pointless to argue about these things. It changes NOTHING about empirical science and evidence-gathering.
The only thing in question here is your contention that "subjective" evidence exists.
Have you tried storing data on a disc with no partition?
Yes. Works great. I think you meant no formatting. But then that's the worst analogy ever.
Why? What did they say about it?
Dualism ? That it was self-evident.
Can you empirically substantiate that the feelings are personal?
You mean, without mentioning hormones and brain functions ? Why would I want to ?
The corpus callosum? I didn't really understand how it was relevant. Could you explain it to me more.
When you sever the corpus, you get two brains, each with its own consciousness, its own point of view, and its own "mind". The reason is that by severing the link you create two distinct, discrete neurological centers. Where you had one mind, you now have two. If the mind wasn't the way we think it is, this wouldn't happen.
I don't think this is particularly relevant.
Of course it is. And it isn't an assumption, because
something obviously exists. From that point on, the mere fact that this something, namely reality, is consistent, is enough for inquiry to proceed. This "divide" you keep insisting is a construct is irrelevant.
You need to assume that the information you receive sensorily reflects reality.
No, I don't, because I can tell that, when it doesn't, it loses its consistency. Didn't you ever notice that you were dreaming while you were still asleep ?
Then you need to assume that there is an observer and an observed. Then yo have objectivity.
Uh-huh, but that is self-evidence since you're there to to the assuming.
Let go of the subject-object divide, let go of the "I", and take a look!
Sorry, I can't log on to the universe via network. I'm stuck in this brain of mine.
You will see for yourself. Objectivity is simply a construct.
Saying "you'll see" is not an argument.
here are whole layers underneath.
I think you're giving your thoughts too much credit.