Rusty_the_boy_robot
Unregistered
R
Re: Re: Materialism
I've read as far as the second post but don't care to read the replies, as I doubt you would consider them anyway.
Materialism:
Premise:
1) The universe contains all things that exist
1, 1) All things that exist are contained in the universe.
2) If a human being cannot percieve 'it', or reduce 'it' to something you can, then 'it' does not exist.
1, 2) All things that exist can be percieved or reduced to something that can be percieved.
OR:
If 'it' can not be percieved or reduced to something that can be percieved then 'it' does not exist.
This should help you quickly understand why UE's argument is invalid. No where does materialism claim that all things that exist somehow posses the trait of "physicalness" nor does materialism claim that "physicalness" is somehow different from "mentalness".
Those are UE's claims.
Materialism cannot be proven false, because to prove that something exists that we cannot percieve is to prove that we can reduce it to something that can be percieved.
UndercoverElephant said:
Stare deeply into Pandoras' box......
The problem is known as the mind-body problem and it is very well described here :
http://home.sprynet.com/~owl1/mind.htm
NB : Most materialists encountering this paper misunderstand statement 5 :
Just to avoid that discussion, I should point out that statement 5 is about linguistics, and is a natural consequence of a linguistic dualism which really does exist. All five of the above theses can be succesfully defended as true.
The solution to the mind-body problem that works is Berkeleys solution, however this is generally dismissed as 'ludicrous', mainly because it isn't properly understood:
http://easyweb.easynet.co.uk/~ursa/philos/az98.htm
My own take on the solution, posted on another site about a year ago :
http://www.mythical.net/cgi-bin/ubbcgi/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=2&t=000122
The problem I have found is that the materialists will defend their belief system as fanatically as any Christian. They are not interested in the solution. They are interested in trying to demonstrate the problem doesn't exist. But the problem does exist, which is why it has been argued about continuously for 400 years.
I've read as far as the second post but don't care to read the replies, as I doubt you would consider them anyway.
Materialism:
"If you can't percieve 'it' or reduce 'it' to something you can, then 'it' does not exist"
Premise:
1) The universe contains all things that exist
1, 1) All things that exist are contained in the universe.
2) If a human being cannot percieve 'it', or reduce 'it' to something you can, then 'it' does not exist.
1, 2) All things that exist can be percieved or reduced to something that can be percieved.
OR:
If 'it' can not be percieved or reduced to something that can be percieved then 'it' does not exist.
This should help you quickly understand why UE's argument is invalid. No where does materialism claim that all things that exist somehow posses the trait of "physicalness" nor does materialism claim that "physicalness" is somehow different from "mentalness".
Those are UE's claims.
Materialism cannot be proven false, because to prove that something exists that we cannot percieve is to prove that we can reduce it to something that can be percieved.