Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Nap, interrupted.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 19,141
Hang on. Can a solipsist believe in the Many Worlds interpretation of QM? 
~~ Paul
~~ Paul
Yes, our experience of it is still subjective. But why does that forbid us from assuming that the subjective experience is an abstraction of the external world?Geoff said:No, because the inductive argument is based upon a load of other factors, none of which provide an escape route from the subjective viewpoint. The world we experience doesn't become any less subjective just because we have rejected solipsism based on an inductive argument.
Yes, our experience of it is still subjective. But why does that forbid us from assuming that the subjective experience is an abstraction of the external world?
I'm having trouble with this. Are you really saying that if I investigate metaphysics carefully, everyone will be assuming that the external world is an abstraction of my subjective experience and not vice versa?
And if I find someone doing it wrong, I can just reject his work?
Hang on. Can a solipsist believe in the Many Worlds interpretation of QM?
~~ Paul
For some reason we seem to have abandoned your proof again. Pondering it:
I think I disagree with premise (B), but it depends on the definitions of exists. I can think of things that I would say "exist" that are not included in (P1 and P2).
~~ Paul
My position is therefore equivalent to eliminative materialism and Berkeleyanism superimposed on each other because I have Being and Nothing superimposed on each other.
I think I've found a very simple way of explaining why the only coherent version of materialism is eliminativism:
Let's assume we have a completed theory of everything physical. That includes everything there is to know about neuroscience. At this point one of two things must be true.
Either
a) Every single mental/subjective/folk-psychological term has now been replaced with a term which is purely objective/physical/neural.
or
b) Not every single mental/subjective/folk-psychological term has now been replaced with a term which is purely objective/physical/neural.
(a) and (b) are mutually exclusive.
If (a) is true then eliminative materialism is true.
If (b) is true then there must be a non-physical element to mental realm, which means all forms of materialism are false.
No other materialist positions are then possible. Either eliminative materialism is true or all forms of materialism are false. And if they would be false then, they must be false now.
IMO, the above argument is impossible to refute. Either minds don't exist or materialism is false. Which, when you think about it, was rather obvious all along.![]()
If that's your definition of eliminative materialism, who cares if eliminative materialism is true?
What could possibly be so bad about all our folk-psychological terms being mapped on to scientific knowledge?
If we have minds now, we would still have minds then. Absolutely nothing about us would have changed.
How on earth can you possibly get from "Every single mental/subjective/folk-psychological term has now been replaced with a term which is purely objective/physical/neural" to "minds don't exist"?
Do you think you have a mind now?
If you do, what do you think is going to happen to that mind if every single mental/subjective/folk-psychological term gets replaced with a term which is purely objective/physical/neural? Is that mind going to vanish?
For someone who adores accusing everyone in sight of begging the question, you have just indulged in a colossal case of it yourself. You have begged the question of whether a purely physical mind could exist, and just helped yourself to the conclusion that it cannot.
Wow. So you either have both or you have neither. In your attempt to keep both I think you have neither.
Hammy tried to tell you early on to make a choice. Whether or not you see the dualism it is there. Everyone else seems to see it. One of these days your advisor, if he is worth his/her salt is going to notice. Take off the dress and make a freakin' choice, why don't you?
You don't want Geddy Lee/Neil Peart lyrics on your gravestone do you?
According to Heidegger, Being should not be investigated through an inquiry into entities as is done in the history of Western philosophy until now, but through an inquiry into Nothing which Heidegger assumes to be identical with Being. Investigation of Being through Nothing presupposes the question of "what is metaphysics?". This latter question is very important, because it plays a double role: on the one hand it secures the possibility of investigating Being through Nothing, and on the other hand it makes possible to transcend metaphysics .
The conceptual pair "Being and Nothing(ness)" denotes for Sartre the central ontological relation as discussed in German Philosophy (notably in Hegel and Heidegger).
...
A student of existentialism might be surprised to find that the concept of "being" occupies a much more prominent position in Being and Nothingness than the concept of "existence". While this prominence fits the overal emphasis of phenomenological ontology on "what is" it is not immediately clear how it could be conducive for the aspired concreteness of existential analysis. Indeed, the word "being" in the sense of "whatever is" represents the most general meaning (like "thing") one can think of. But Sartre uses the term "being" predominantly in the distinctive sense of "what grounds" something (for instance, "the being of consciousness"). This is still a metaphysical usage (it is no coincidence that "being" has had such a long and rich metaphysical career), but Sartre had several good reasons to adopt this metaphysical terminology via German philosophy (Hegel and Heidegger). The most important one is that it was very helpul in avoiding the traditional Cartesian duality of subject and object.
Embracing your inner corpse
In each of us is an inner corpse struggling to be exhumed. Unlike the corpse you will one day become, this shadow corpse is alive. It is the living presence of Death that you carry within you. It is more than your certain knowledge of death's ultimate triumph; it is your portal to nothingness, the other ocean of being. If you can find the courage to unearth and embrace your inner corpse, you can lead a more vivid, authentic and triumphant life. But if you keep your inner corpse buried away, you live a great lie. You distort your search for truth into a project of false immortality. You deny the most solemn core of your being, condemning yourself to premature cheerfulness. To the outside world you might seem healthy, happy, and successful--but, your inner corpse might just as well be dead.
My inner corpse is not dead.
You ought to, if you actually want a position to defend.
You've missed the point, as usual.
No, Jeremy got it right - no minds, just brain processes.
Because the word "mind" would have no referent. I think you may actually be the only person still posting in this thread who has no idea what any of the arguments are about.
No, I'm just going to get used to the fact that I never had a mind to begin with. Just like I was never breathing phlogiston. Understand yet?
Erm.....and what was wrong with the proof? It was bulletproof. Can't you follow a logical argument?
If elimative materialism was just what you said it was, it would be entirely inoffensive even to people who believed they have experiences and minds.
The game you are playing, I believe, is that you are deliberately attempting to blur the distinction between materialism and eliminative materialism.
On the contrary, there is absolutely no reason that we could not figure out material bases for all of our folk psychological beliefs yet still have minds and beliefs. That's why your explanation of eliminative materialism was inaccurate and deficient.
Of course it still would. If you want to advance a ridiculous claim like the claim that existing minds would cease to exist if we learned more about them, you need a lot more than a naked assertion.

Why on earth would you have to do that if every single mental/subjective/folk-psychological term gets replaced with a term which is purely objective/physical/neural? How would it follow from that, that you never had a mind?
Rubbish. That "proof" has been debunked repeatedly, you just snip the offending debunkings and pretend they never existed each time it happens.
Memories.Geoff said:What things can you think of that are neither P1 or P2 apart from fictional things and the entities of mathematics?
Stop telling people to do this, Geoff. We have questioned the definition of eliminative materialism enough that you should address our question, rather than telling us to read the fuzzy definitions again. Even the Duke of Eliminative Materialism himself, Churchland, stated that the folk term are useful until they are replaced. Does this sound like he is making some sort of ontological claim about the nonexistence of minds? It sure sounds like you are.Geoff said:Kevin
Go and look up Eliminative Materialism on Wikipedia. As usual, you do not actually know what you are talking about.
Geoff
Come on, Kevin--of course no one would any longer experience a mind. It's patently obvious! In fact, we can show that this sort of thing has happened before--since Copernicus, no one has ever seen a sunrise! Once we explained it scientifically, it ceased to exist.Of course it still would. If you want to advance a ridiculous claim like the claim that existing minds would cease to exist if we learned more about them, you need a lot more than a naked assertion.