Toontown
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2010
- Messages
- 6,595
Once you specify "you", you are drawing the target.
Was there some other possible "me" brain in that large-but-not-infinite set of possible unique brains Pixel42 mentioned?
The U-brain assumption says no. This is the one. No. There was no other. No. There will be no other.
But that's not a target specified by the u-brain assumption, because...well, dave's rules.
But "you" doesn't exist until after the fact.
So the target you deny isn't hit until the target you deny is hit. But after it's hit, you have no choice but to deny it was ever a target because it's already been hit. Or you're a Texas sharpshooter.
Lots of ways to fall into that TS trap of yours. What do you think when you wake up, presumably in the morning? "Hey, somebody woke up."?
?
But noticing that the assumed one and only brain exists is drawing a target around it?
Yes.
That is one wierd "yes", dave. How do you avoid noticing that you exist?
Because if you do notice you exist, you've committed the Texas sharpshooter fallacy. So every time you say "I" or "me", you commit the TSF.
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