UndercoverElephant
Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Messages
- 9,058
Ad admirable summary, Zaayrdragon.
Geoff starts from the position that if minds exist they are immaterial, and that the idea that minds do not exist at all is crazy. In other words, he covertly assumes all sorts of dumb things.
More false accusation not based on anything I said.
Thus reductive materialism, which says minds are material, squicks Geoff because it is saying something he assumes is false. Geoff complains that it is dualism in a dress, but only because he assumed from the start that if minds exist then dualism is true. Who knows why he assumed that? I can't account for this level of mendacity. The only dualist in the picture is Geoff, and the only person assuming that "mind" implies dualism is Geoff.
Except I'm not a dualist...
1. You have repeatedly claimed that minds must have an immaterial component.
Except I haven't claimed minds have an immaterial component....
Why should we believe this?
No idea. It's not my position.
Isn't this just dualism, which has been completely discredited?
What you described may have been. But it isn't my position.
1a. You have repeatedly claimed that if we replace the word "mind" with a term which refers to exactly the same thing, but implies no immaterial component, that we will have denied that we have minds.
We would deny that the word mind had any other referent.
Why should we believe this? Or alternatively, if you insist on defining minds as necessarily immaterial minds, why should we care if we don't have an
immaterial mind?
I haven't insisted this.