MRC_Hans
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2002
- Messages
- 24,961
Humphreys said:I think we need to ask what property material things have which immaterial things cannot have. Isn't location one of these? If something doesn't occupy a particular location in our Universe, then it must be immaterial, right?
That depends on what you mean by position. What is the position of a photon?
In that case, where are dreams and thoughts located? Not in our brains or our heads, only the physical processes exist there.
Dreams and thoughts ARE the physical processes (as per my position).
What other properties do material things have? Weight, size?
How much do thoughts weigh? How big are they?
They are a (very large) number of electrical impulses. How much do the bits in your computer weight? How big are they?
Another thing that is common to all material things is the ability to be experienced and interacted with by anyone, at least in theory. However, you can't experience my thoughts, and you can't interact with them either.
I can. I can scan your brain and see what you think. At present, only a very rough picture, but still a picture. I can send an electrical impulse into your brain, and make you perceive certain things. Our present knowledge and technology only allows us to interact with brains in a very coarse way, but interact we can.
When I picture a white cat in my head, only I experience it, no one else can.
When my screen-less computer recalls a picture of a cat, nobody else can see it.
Can we say the same about any material things?
There is a stone on a planet on the other side of the galaxy. Nobody can see it, nobody has ever seen it, and nobody will ever see it. Is it not material?
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I should just add, that I don't think we can even argue that thoughts could possibly be thought of as material things by any stretch of the imagination.
Nevertheless several of us are arguing just that.
I think from the materialist's perspective it's more reasonable to argue that thoughts don't actually exist, but are just illusions, rather than trying to claim they are material.
And, pray tell, what are illusions, from a materialist's perspective?
Hans