HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
Let's take the example of the "the sound of a single clapping hand" and "the portable hole" (I loved "Who framed Roger Rabbit"). There are contradictions within those terms. By "conceive" I mean something that also involves logical thinking, which really does think about those terms. Something that actually attaches meaning to the words.
Right. But there were movies about them. Is that suddenly no longer proving dualism?
It is impossible to attach a referent to the term of a "hole without something that it is a hole in". It is a contradiction in terms. It is impossible to be a referent of such a word.
(By the way, in the movie, they don't actually draw a "portable hole". What they draw is a black portable circle that magically becomes a hole, when one puts it on any surface... )
There were plenty of cartoons where one rolls up a hole and moves it somewhere else. Or when one drags a hole a meter to the left with one finger. I don't think the latter transforms into anything else than a hole in the process.
Plus, if you're going to play the "it transforms into something else" card about holes in transit, I'm going to play the same card about minds. How about: Yeah, but when you swap minds, it just becomes data until you put it in another brain.
Did you understand the different terms in the ways we used "conceive"? For example, an "immaterial ghost" is inconceivable. There is a contradiction in the term. "Ghost" implies a certain form, which "immaterial" denies. You can say "well, there are movies about ghosts". But in the movies those ghosts aren't really presented as immaterial...
The whole point is that I'm no longer sure which meaning of conceive you use. You seem to switch between "if there was a movie about it, it must be a different entity" to "yeah, but it's not really conceiving if it's self-contradictory" and back all the time. That's what I'm trying to pin down, because otherwise we're not getting anywhere.
And no, I'm pretty sure there was at least one movie where ghosts are invisible and can't directly interact with matter. (But apparently willpower hocus-pocus works anyway.) Don't underestimate the human capability to imagine the impossible, or to make a movie out of it
Plus, again, how about movies where you hear explosions in space? Do those prove that sound can happen without a medium to you?
For example, I also think that the word "supernatural" is inconceivable, since it cannot have a referent. People certainly believe in supernatural things, and bla bla bla... But what they really believe when they say "supernatural" is more of the nature of "something that I cannot understand, mysterious, wow". It is impossible to conceive of something supernatural, since the term itself is self-contradictory. Nature is by definition "all that exists", and there cannot be anything "outside of all that exists", it is a meaningless expression. When I say "conceive" it includes logical thinking about the meaning of your words.
...except when it comes to mind and body, apparently, since then you no longer seem too bothered about the contradictions.
To re-iterate, my argument is that it is impossible to think of a property without the thing it is a property of. By think, I mean logical thinking, such a thinking that ascribes concrete referents to each of the terms of the wordd. It is impossible for a property of a ball to exist without a ball - and NOT for scientific reasons. But the reason why we know that it is impossible for a disembodied consciousness to exist is BECAUSE of scientific reasons. There is a difference.
Really? It's not that hard to conceive some device or place that sucks the colour out of stuff, and I'm pretty sure there was at least a cartoon about one. Plus it's been used in more than one computer game, since it just involves a simple shader to implement.
Proving, obviously, that colour isn't a property of the material. A copper tube doesn't transform to iron in the process, it just stops being red-ish. A plant's chlorophil doesn't transform into something else, it just stops being green. Rust doesn't stop being iron oxide... you get the idea.
Because if elements transformed into something else, you'd have a bigger problems there.
Does that prove some material-colour dualism just because it's been conceived and represented on the screen?