UndercoverElephant
Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Messages
- 9,058
Paul
Think back back to the example of the brain in the vat. Since we are now using the word "physical" to refer to the objects of experience, the BIV, even though it is being fed data from a computer, still sees physical objects. They aren't like normal physical objects because if the BIV hallucinates a chair there is nothing chair-like in the noumenon as their distal cause. Instead, their distal cause is computer-like thing in the noumenon. So in the BIV case, where did the physical things come from? The answer is that they are parts of your mind. Both the hallucinated chair (technical term: a merely intentional object) and the chair you are sitting on can be decribed as physical. Neither of them "came from" anywhere. It's one of those questions like "what happened before the universe exists". Objects in minds don't come from anywhere. The question you need to ask is "where do minds come from?", and the answer is that minds are the combination of two things: the content is determined by the noumenal equivalent of a neural process and the fact that it actually exists is because it is a manifestation of Being/Nothing.
You are asking me what the distinction is between physical and noumenal? Why are you asking that again? I've answered that exact same question several times now. What didn't you understand about the answer?
The noumenon is the external-to-mind cause of your experiences, including this distal cause (the noumenal chair) and the proximal cause (the noumenal brain).
Physical objects are internal-to-mind component parts of your experiences.
When I had finished describing the neutral part of the system I declared it to be complete. The physical things are already contained within it, but from the neutral viewpoint they become the relationship between being and a noumenal brain state. Only in the world of experience does the relationship turn into "Physical things". You can think of physical things as mental representations of noumenal things.
Because they are neccesarily tightly-bound to noumenal brains. And noumenal brains are differentiated. Your independent identity is ensured by the fact that your brain and my brain are differentiated.
"Mind" is just the name of one part of the human experience of reality - it is the name for the totality of that experience of reality. Therefore it is not a word that can be applied to the neutral world at all. It is laced with dualism. ALL dualism belongs on the phenomenal side - the world as we experience it. As soon as you start talk about the neutral things having minds you are making the mistake of taking concepts from the phenomenal world and trying to apply them to the noumenal world. "Minds" have a correlate in the noumenal world - but it would be just as wrong to call that correlate "mind" as it is to call it "matter".
If the things-in-themselves are mental then you are an idealist.
Sorry, I don't get it. I can sort of picture noumenal things as neutral things, but I don't understand where physical things come from.
Think back back to the example of the brain in the vat. Since we are now using the word "physical" to refer to the objects of experience, the BIV, even though it is being fed data from a computer, still sees physical objects. They aren't like normal physical objects because if the BIV hallucinates a chair there is nothing chair-like in the noumenon as their distal cause. Instead, their distal cause is computer-like thing in the noumenon. So in the BIV case, where did the physical things come from? The answer is that they are parts of your mind. Both the hallucinated chair (technical term: a merely intentional object) and the chair you are sitting on can be decribed as physical. Neither of them "came from" anywhere. It's one of those questions like "what happened before the universe exists". Objects in minds don't come from anywhere. The question you need to ask is "where do minds come from?", and the answer is that minds are the combination of two things: the content is determined by the noumenal equivalent of a neural process and the fact that it actually exists is because it is a manifestation of Being/Nothing.
Objects in the lifeworld. Parts of human experience. The things that are right in front of you now. You are typing on a physical keyboard. Somewhere in the noumenon there is a noumenal Paul noumenally typing on a noumenal keyboard, but those things aren't physical. They are noumenal.
Doesn't help. What is the distinction and why is there a distinction?
You are asking me what the distinction is between physical and noumenal? Why are you asking that again? I've answered that exact same question several times now. What didn't you understand about the answer?
The noumenon is the external-to-mind cause of your experiences, including this distal cause (the noumenal chair) and the proximal cause (the noumenal brain).
Physical objects are internal-to-mind component parts of your experiences.
When I had finished describing the neutral part of the system I declared it to be complete. The physical things are already contained within it, but from the neutral viewpoint they become the relationship between being and a noumenal brain state. Only in the world of experience does the relationship turn into "Physical things". You can think of physical things as mental representations of noumenal things.
It isn't. There is only one Being. It has no individuated identity, if you remember. Your identity as Paul is beestowed upon you by the fact that Paul's mind is a reflection of Paul's noumenal brain. Those things have an identity.
Yes, but as experienced by Being, which is undifferentiated. Why aren't all our experiences one big Borg-like superconsciousness?
Because they are neccesarily tightly-bound to noumenal brains. And noumenal brains are differentiated. Your independent identity is ensured by the fact that your brain and my brain are differentiated.
Nothingness is the most neutral concept in existence.
Then the Neutral should also experience, allowing the noumenal to have mind.
"Mind" is just the name of one part of the human experience of reality - it is the name for the totality of that experience of reality. Therefore it is not a word that can be applied to the neutral world at all. It is laced with dualism. ALL dualism belongs on the phenomenal side - the world as we experience it. As soon as you start talk about the neutral things having minds you are making the mistake of taking concepts from the phenomenal world and trying to apply them to the noumenal world. "Minds" have a correlate in the noumenal world - but it would be just as wrong to call that correlate "mind" as it is to call it "matter".
If the things-in-themselves are mental then you are an idealist.
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