To force the definitions of subjective and objective to be polar opposites is to simplify the situation to the point of absurdity.
Paul, think about what you are saying. Is it
really "absurd" to use words to mean what they have always meant? Where's your plausibilometer when you need it? What you are calling "absurd" is simply to go back to using words to refer to what they've always refered to.
And, I might add, it begs the question.
Rubbish, Paul. You are defending nonsense again. I showed you why it is YOU who is trying to assume your conclusion. I showed you WHY you do it and HOW you do it. But the only way you can hang on to your illogical belief system is to continually accuse ME of doing what YOU are actually doing.
It's not me who's assuming my conclusion, Paul. It's you. Every time.
But if you insist on rigging the definitions....
Paul, I am not going to let you get away with this lie any longer. You have a free hand to provide any definitions you like.
You can't do it. Stop blaming ME for YOUR logical problems, the structure and origin of which are very carefully explained in post #836.
Apparently this should continue with "... not a single bit of which is objective in any way." In any event, "everything you have ever experienced" is clearly incorrect.
WHY?
Don't just say "it's clearly wrong". It isn't. It's clearly correct. Why do you think it is it wrong? That is PRECISELY what the term refers to.
So the fact that we use subjective experience to refer to fuzzy things like "the sum total of your mind" and inaccurate things like "everything you have ever experienced" means that it's not a synonym for brain function, in the linguistic sense. Granted.
There is nothing "fuzzy" about either of those definitions. They couldn't be any
less fuzzy or inaccurate. Are you really be
honest with yourself here?
However, you have at least now accepted that brain processes and "subjective experiences" cannot by considered as synonymns. It will help if we don't have to repeat that particular circle any more times.
But to use this as a basis for metaphysical conclusions about any fundamental difference between subjective experience and brain function is nothing but empty wordplay.
You are jumping the gun. When you've got a usable, coherent set of definitions, then we can go back and see where it leads us.
If philosophers use your definition, they are forcing a duality that may indeed be a linguistic duality, but not necessarily an actual one.
I'm not a dualist, remember?
Please have another look at post #836. It is important, and I don't think you grokked it properly.
Geoff