I don't think that is what metaphysics is, I think it is a purely speculative exercise of the imagination; that is it consists in what we are capable of imagining might be the nature of reality.
In the absence of ways to test these speculations, we have no possibility of determining what could be "the best general account of what reality is",
Each person will have their own preferences, which will depend on what their basic presuppositions are. Or perhaps it would be more accurate to say that what their presuppositions are will depend on their preferences
By ontology I understand the consititutive, necessary and sufficient conditions of all human practices; therefore, it makes most sense to "subscribe" to naturalism (à la Laozi, Epicurus, Spinoza, Hume, Nietzsche, Dewey ... )
I think "consciousness" – phenomenal self modeling – supervenes on the brain's neurological systems bodily interacting with its local environment.
probably violates conservation laws and as a conjecture does not explain anything.
But you acknowledge all this is groundless speculation, right? There are no experiments we can do to confirm whether phenomena predicted by this conjecture are observed or not, right?
Are you implying the difference in knowledge from the human olden days to the human current days, is a reflection of a changing world? If so, sure, why not. That lightning came from angry gods reflected the ontological status of the old world, lightning as electrostatic discharge reflects the ontological status of the current world. It is impossible to prove or disprove the world changed on the whim of a universal mind.
How do we know? We don’t, but we raise more questions by supposing our changing knowledge reflects a changing world, then we do if we suppose the world stays constant and it is our knowledge that changes.
We got the whole passel of folks, all through the ages, experiencing a certain thing, in exactly the same way, when they push the very same kind of round something down a hill. Basic mathematics hasn’t changed since the invention of numbers.
Only if the thing-in-itself is conceptually maligned, usually by invoking a theory that defines it differently or finds no need of such a thing, than the theory in which it was originally contained.
Nope. You said conscious experience is the representation of something. It isn’t representation, its knowledge. Conscious experience is knowledge of something, whether a determined something or just a plain ol’ something, depends on whether or not the tripartite logical part of the system, the proper cognitive part, comprised of understanding, judgement, and reason (but not intuition or consciousness, or the mere subjective condition) can all get their respective functional eggs in the same basket, re: the synthesis of representations conforms to the effect the object causes on perception.
I’m fine with distinguishing my will from yours, given the similarities or differences in our behaviors. But how I’m going to distinguish my will from a mind that wills the universe, is inconceivable.
Which gets us back to why propose such a thing in the first place.
In other words, disembodied consciousness (i.e. spirits) :roll:
Technically, it is only knowledge of representations, hence not of the world per se
…
The world itself doesn’t change in its time as much as our knowledge of it does in our own, so it is obvious there is a major distinction between the two.
If it is to say epistemic solipsism is the notion that the only absolutely certain knowledge is that which belongs to the subject capable of it
Sensations. The thing of sensation is the same thing as the thing of the ding an sich.
It is an object for the sake of communication, for talking about it.
Technically, conscious experience shows us we know something. Theoretically, knowledge of things presupposes the representation of them necessarily, given the kind of system by which humans know things.
All of it, re: conscious experience, is not phenomenon, and experience, as a methodological terminus, is not itself a mere representation. In Kant, the last rendition of a representation is in judgement, an aspect of understanding, which, in the form of a logical syllogism, is way back at the point of the manifold of minor premises, whereas experience stands as the conclusion.
With respect to representations, on the other hand, how does the subject determine which idea/representation belong to the universal mind and which are his own?
So, if our brains are representations like anything else, then how can consciousness be said to reside there?
If the brain is a representation, then the consciousness that seems to reside there, and the self-model that comes with it must also be representations.
The question then is what is doing the representing? Perhaps nothing? Or everything?
So the deal is, in K-speak, in a human representational system, that which is represented by the system, is not what is is entailed in human knowledge, which is the same as saying that for which the representation stands, is unknown by the system, which just is the human himself. That which is represented in humans is the world, so first and foremost the world itself is that which is unknown by humans.
The fix for that, is to say, in S-speak, even if the world is not known by humans, it is surely known by something not human, whatever it may be. If it happens to be a universal mind, and if Aristotle is still in force, then that universal mind will necessarily know everything about everything, which makes explicit it will know all about the very things humans do not, which the most important would be the world itself.
Long story short, the universal mind has ideas, wills them into worldly object manifestations, complete in themselves, subsequently representable in humans just as completely as the willed idea prescribes in its manifestations. This, of course, logically, makes human knowledge of the ding an sich not only possible, but given. If the universal mind has the idea of it, wills it, then the human system can represent it in himself, and K’s human knowledge limit is exceeded. Which was, given the time and place, the whole raison d’etre for S’s world as will and representation (idea) in the first place.
If close enough, however, it remains to be posited what is gained by such a program, and why it should not be dismissed as a bridge too far.
faults in the universal mind theory must be addressed from a Kantian perspective, insofar as the one is almost directly connected to the other, thus if I can refute it, if the universal mind theory cannot withstand refutation, your questions would be answered thereby.
If everything is a representation in our heads, are our heads also representations...in our heads?
However, since it is provably impossible for explain consciousness under physicalism, — Bob Ross
I wonder if this is a bit dogmatic?
I agree that there is no obvious answer at hand, but thinkers like Metzinger point in certain directions.
But even if all forms of physicalism end up being superseded, this does not make mind-at-large necessary
there might be any number of other explanations we have not yet considered
I wonder about our expertise to make totalising statements on this highly complex and speculative subject. I also wonder about the limitations of human cognition to solve some of the problems we seem to identify.
I think we have gone about as far as we can with going over the same things again. I appreciate that despite our differences the discussion remained civil.
Agreed; I’ll go with the three logical laws of thought.
Hmmm. This looks like it puts representation in the external world, when I want it to be in my head
Is it just the same to say representation of immaterial ideas are what’s expressed in space and time?
And is it representation of immaterial ideas that is expressed by the mental?
So the physical is just mental representation of immaterial ideas.
I consider reality to be that which corresponds to a sensation in general, that, consequently, the conception of which indicates a being.
It follows that there isn’t need for a further account of reality, but there would certainly need to be an account for sensation.
Sensation is how we are awakened to reality, which, of course, thereby presupposes it, be it what it may. No need to account for it.
Sorta like your metaphysical necessity?
What are the other parts of the account of reality.
Both conceptions and ideas are representations, an idea is a conception, but a conception is not necessarily an idea.
But the real problem is expressions of will, which for me belong in moral philosophy alone, which makes this metaphysical nonsense…..….for he who would attribute to will no more than autonomous volition predicated on subjective principles.
Which brings out one of S’s gripes with K….causality, cause and effect. S rejected K’s invocation of freedom as a causality, so without it, for him, will does not stand the relation to cause and effect.
What’s next?
So of course we should expect to a dead body to still have an alive mind — Bob Ross
You might expect that. I don't expect that. The majority of the medical community does not expect that. The majority of those working in cognitive science do not expect that.
I am aware of the tree that is providing me with shade, but that experience does not mean the tree is within experience, only that my awareness of it is.
You’re on record as admitting a Schopenhauer-ian bent
He was the champion of the PSR, yet brute facts negate the PSR. It must be that being “metaphysically necessary” is sufficient reason, or the PSR doesn’t apply here.
But why should it be necessary that reality be a universal mind, or manifest from such a thing?
The representation is never the physical stuff, and the mental is sometimes what is represented
How is yours not backwards? Actually, it is backwards, so the real question becomes….how do you justify the backwardness, without merely saying it isn’t?
Why is it not that coming to know the world from two sides isn’t two kinds of knowledge?
a priori as representations of mental events, and a posteriori as representation of physical stuff, but only the latter is coming to know the world.
I’d be happier if it was the case coming to know the world from two conditions, which would be physical stuff and mental events, but not so much that each is a kind of knowledge all by itself without influence from the other
For S it is the will, I thought, but either way…same-o, same-o
At what point might Kastrup's answer to materialism be a case of 'mind-at-large of the gaps'?
He rather relies upon the frailties of the former in order to justify his version of latter. I think the first job is easier than the second.
OK. No problem. Thanks anyway.
This is only part of it. You are leaving out important information that cannot be gained simply by looking at an arrangement of parts. An engine does work. That work depends on parts but is not in any of the parts or combination of parts. The whole cannot be explained without an explanation of what the engine does, how it functions as a whole within another whole, a car for example.
I am claiming that there are no disembodied minds. We find bodies that seem to be without mind, but no mind without bodies. The physical is ineliminable.
An actual tornado is not an assemblage parts. Wind does not combine with dust, etc. The forces that create the tornado create the wind and raise the dust.
What is at issue is methodological rather than ontological. Because we do not have access to disembodied minds we must look to the embodied minds of living being. That is the only place we find mind.
”Either a)there are physical things that we are aware of within experience or b) there are no physical things without experience. “
a) states that there are physical things and that we are aware of these things within experience. If, however, you accept b) then it is not simply that we are aware of these things in experience but that they would not be without experience.
If one cannot be solved in terms of the other this cuts both ways.
And once again, it has not been proven that physicalism is unable to solve it even theoretically. You are convinced it can't. You should leave it there.
I have no introspective experience of a universal mind. Private experience cannot stand as public, shareable evidence. In your mind is the idea of universal mind. That idea in your mind is only evidence that your embodied mind can entertain the notion of a non-embodied mind .
My mind that produced the dream is an embodied mind.
Whatever I dream, whether a body is present in it or not, it is the dream of an embodied mind.
Cards on the table kinda thing, I must say, if we’re discussing analytic idealism from a Kantian perspective, I’m not sufficiently versed in the one to juxtaposition to the other. So maybe you should start with a brief synopsis of what analytic idealism is. Or, just start anywhere you like.
How do you feel about Kastrup's most extraordinary claim, that humans and all conscious creatures are dissociated alters of mind-at-large?
I initially thought that the need for a mind-at-large made Kastrup similar to Berkeley,
Mind-at-large is critical to Kastrup's position. I wonder how we can arrive at a reasonable belief that this entity is all there is and that we are all expressions of it?
Which includes our mind, doesn't, it? I didn't say only our mind.
Anyway, I will have to assume that by mind-(in)dependent you mean that the existence of the physical universe (matter and energy) is in/dependent of/on our mind.
BTW, what other mind do you have ... in mind, besides ours, that is more advanced and more complex and on which the p.u. could can be dependent on?
What I mean, in these two cases, is that you seem to try to reject my interpretation of your statemnts as incorrect, with no real reason. This only creates unnecessary "traffic" in our discussion and prolongs it without reason to maybe lead to an impass.
But HPC does not say of imply that we should doubt about our consciousness or that we are conscious beings
It is a problem of "mechanics", a problem of scientific explanation, proof, etc. Not of its existence!
Bob, I asked for a simpler description or argumentation if possible, not more complicated!
An engine is not an assemblage of found parts. The parts are designed and manufactured as parts of a whole. Even something as simple as a bolt cannot be understood in isolation, without it being a part of a whole.
A biological entity is not put together out of parts. It can be separated into parts but unlike the engine those parts did not exist prior to the living being.
They are not emergent. Once again, parts are parts of some whole. The relation of parts is inherent in the design of the parts. They are designed with their function and purpose in mind.
Of course there is more that needs to be explained!
What is it for?
What does it do?
What is its purpose?
Either a)there are physical things that we are aware of within experience or b) there are no physical things without experience.
Either a) you are a substance dualist or b) you are a monist. If b) then you cannot sidestep an explanation of how mental stuff gives rise to physical things.
Idealists mean there are physically-independent minds. Given the central importance of conscious experience in your account, what do you make of the fact that we have no conscious experience of disembodied minds?
Organs are extrinsic representations of senses within one's perception. Senses are not existentially contingent on perception. However, the organs are existentially contingent upon one's perception.
Yeah...
I'm sorry, but that just looks like a word salad, to put it mildly.
As if one's organs do not exist without subjective qualitative experience. Seems to me to be the wrong way around. The experience, particularly the depth and breadth of human experience, is existentially dependent upon the biological machinery.
Is that the acceptable standard for all accounting practices, or just some of them?
Are you claiming that the position you're arguing in favor of successfully accounts for the hard problem without obscurities?
Oh... and you're equivocating terms to an extent I've not witnessed in quite some time. Particularly the term "perception(s)"
In addition, it seems there's a fair amount of anthropomorphism going on as well.
I'm afraid I simply do not have the time to make all this explicit. So, I'll just have to leave it all as bare assertion, but not for the lack of empirical evidence throughout the thread. Rather, due to the lack of time and personal priorities...
The problem is that attempting to understanding Kantian idealism may very well negate your promotion.
We get into this deep enough, you may find your idealism was Kantian all along, or, if it most certainly was not,
And even if questions regarding Kantian idealism are merely a matter of your own personal interest, satisfying that interest isn’t necessarily to support your thesis.
In short, it’s possible you’re wasting your own time.
It seems you're lumping thought, belief, perception, imagination, olfactory, visual, tactile, auditory, gustatory, and all sorts of things into the category of subjective experience
Hmmm... but you explicitly forbid physicalist accounts from appealing to obscurity???
Anyway, I will have to assume that by mind-(in)dependent you mean that the existence of the physical universe (matter and energy) is in/dependent of/on our mind.
Then you say, "If it is the latter, then I cannot account for myself as a conscious being." Does this means that you cannot consider yourself as a conscious being?
BTW, for me, examples act as arguments, even better.
I just thought ... Why don't you start by giving a definition or description of "universal mind"?
You cannot understand an engine if you do not understand the parts. That is the reductive part. But you can't understand an engine at that point. The parts have to fit and operate together. You have to look at the functional whole. That is the non-reductive part of the process.
If the mental cannot be explained in terms of the physical then the physical cannot be explained in terms of the mental.
But nevertheless, benefit of the doubt: where does the notion that space and time are synthetic a priori come from?
Since the propositions of geometry are synthetic a priori and are recognized
with apodictic certainty, I would like to inquire as to the origin of such
propositions and what supports the understanding in order that it achieve to
such utterly necessary and universally valid perceptions?
Synthetic/analytic has to do with logic, hence subsumed under reason, but space and time have to do with empirical objects hence subsumed under intuition.
And while space and time are representations a priori, they are not synthetic.
Now this stipulates that there are synthetic a priori principles of knowledge, but that is not to say space and time are themselves synthetic a priori.
Whatever other origins there are for space and time are irrelevant to any system that conceives its own.
…
Could our intelligence originate space and time in a different way?
I say I understand the pure ideality of space and time, but don’t understand what you mean by qualifying them with synthetic.
Noumena are not things-in-themselves. The latter are real spatial-temporal existences, the existence of the former is only possible for an intelligence unlike our own.
If by beyond the two pure forms of intuition you mean not conditioned by them, then it is the case noumena are beyond them. Still, anything not conditioned by space and time is utterly unintelligible to us, therefore we are not authorized to say that which is beyond them, are noumena.
Again with your vocabulary, the mind is not outside time, is conditioned by it
how can anything at all be known beyond the mind, if the mind is absolutely necessary and sufficient for all knowledge.
in that mere perception and representation in phenomena does not give any knowledge at all.
You said the mind produces, and in common vernacular to produce is to actualize, I should think.
Space does not represent any property of objects as things in themselves, nor does it represent them in their relations to each other; in other words, space does not represent to us any determination of objects such as attaches to the objects themselves.
Great talk; I’m liking it, so….thanks.
By analogy, you cannot understand how an engine works by taking it apart. A pile of parts is not an engine. Taking it apart in only a part of the process whose goal is to understand the whole.
Insisting on a metaphysical position when trying to understand a biological organism is counterproductive
Physicalism is not a rejection of mind. To the contrary, it seeks to understand mind in terms of the organisms that have minds, without assuming that mind comes from somewhere other than the organism.
A misunderstanding of physicalism is not proof. Brain states are only part of the story. But of course the brain is an important part of the story. It is not clear what you think a brain state is.
Consciousness is not a set of biological functions. I think this mistake is the source of your claims about brain states.
I would counter by saying you can't prove it by metaphysical argument, but you think you have. Back to the top of this post.
BTW, how can we infer that "universal mind" exists? Can you present a specific agrumentation to support it?
So no, the mind does not produce space and time, it conceives apodeitic conditions as explanatory devices. Therefore, it is possible the mind has no warrant for ontological status.
FYI, he wrote the precursor essays that would eventually become tectonic plate theory, nebular theory, tidal retardation of axial velocity theory...
Again, FYI……in CPR, mind is the subject of a proposition 176 times, reason is the subject over 1300 times, in ~800 pages total. Mind can be merely a convenient placeholder, signifying nothing more than the terminus of infinite regress hence omitted generally without detriment to a metaphysical theories of the human condition, but reason cannot, insofar as reason actually belongs to every human and without which he is just an animal. If we’re going to reify an abstract, let’s reify that which a human can be proved to possess, rather than that which he could conceivably do without.
Kant proves that the impossibility of denying the existence of my own body is sufficient to prove the existence of the external world. The reverse establishes the truth, in that without an external world conditioned on space and time, there is no apodeictic certainty for my own body, the denial of which is blatantly contradictory. As such, the inference of an external world is not necessary, for its reality is certain. It follows that that by which we are impacted and that from which representations are given and empirical knowledge is possible, is not the thing-in-itself, which is the ground of his empirical realism doctrine from the beginning.
Your way, re: the production of space and time, requires the production of two infinites, with all the irregularities found therein. My way needs no infinites, but only those spaces and times which condition the perception, or possible perception, of an object, followed by the experience or possible experience thereof.
If your "analytic" idealism abandons "esse is percipi" how does it differ from representational realism?
Berkeley's subjective idealism was already "analytic" in the sense that he postulated that observation and conception is tautologically equivalent to existence.
What Berkeley's principle is actually saying, is rather trivial ; that only what is observed or conceived can be thought or talked about. If a realist asserts that "unperceived objects such as quarks exist", Berkeley wouldn't contradict the content of the assertion but remind the realist that his use of "unperceived" requires elaboration until it refers to something thought or perceived, for the assertion to become sensical.
It's the eternal problem of the one and the many. Are we ourselves in reality separate beings or are we one being, that perceives itself as many? The latter option is not so trivial to get rid of...
Still basing a large part of one's philosophy on DID is risky and one should be cautious in relying on it too much. Maybe when more is learned, it could be sensible to use, or it could end up being a false avenue.
Right, you have said that several times. But that is not something you know.
…
Right. You are claiming that we can never provide a physical explanation. But again, that is just an assertion, and it is not evidently true.
There you go. Based on your definition. But creating a definition and then rejection something because it contradicts your definition does not hold water.
You say that I am question begging because my definition merely precludes scientific investigation. I want to clarify that I am not doing that: my definition of a ‘hard problem’ is that it is irreconcilable under the view in question—there is nothing question begging about that. I am then, on top of using that definition, claiming that the ‘problem’ of consciousness for reductive physicalism is a hard problem in the sense that I defined it. There is nothing question begging about that because I am not saying that the definition is the proof of it being a hard problem. Now let me explain why I think there is a hard problem of consciousness for reductive physicalism (and it is not merely a soft problem of consciousness).
The Hard Problem is a term of art. It has a specific meaning as defined by Chalmers and is used as defined. Calling something "a hard problem", stipulating it is irreconcilable with physicalism, is your problem, not the accepted meaning of the hard problem.
Physicalism need not be reductive physicalism.
The recognition that a living organism can be conscious, is not reductive
To claim that consciousness must come from elsewhere because a physical explanation must be reductive is misguided.
It is not that biological functions impact consciousness but that it creates consciousness.
To ignore these physical organisms because you reject reductive physicalism is willful blindness.
Yet, it [plants] does!
That's why I like to connect consciousness with perception. Because we can know that the another person or a dog, etc. are conscious too --besides ourselves, who can experience consciousness directly-- by observing their reactions to stimuli, communicating with them, etc. If they react, it means that they can perceive and therefore they are conscious entities.
No, he didn’t correct the error; there wasn’t one to correct. It is impossible to know what things are in themselves, iff the human cognitive system is representational, which they both accepted as the case, and that necessarily.
All S did was take that which is impossible to not know….the will….and call it the thing-in-itself, a philosophical blunder for which there is no legitimate excuse.
it is impossible such knowledge can be of the original energy source.
noumena is a conception of a general class of conceptions
The categories are those primitive conceptions, not by which they are but by which representations of objects can be united such that a cognition is possible.
So, I have created the following list, prompted by your request! :smile:
But consciousness is not limited to perception. I would mention that if I knew you would scrutinize my statement! :grin:
OK, but consciousness a characteristic of all life: Living organisms as well as plants.
All this is fine. But the "universal mind" is only a concept for me: I have no experience of it.
In a human being, the Formless is in a relationship with the form and thus it is subject to different laws, laws of spacetime. The Formless does not lose its nature but it becomes limited by the form.
For some reason humans are born with the potential to realize that Formless Mind which is the original source of his/her consciousness.
How does what I say differ from the hard problem as described by Chalmers? He concludes:
If experience arises from a physical basis, then the question of why and how biological function gives rise to experience, is the hard problem
Now you might think that science will not yield an answer, but that does not mean investigating the problem scientifically is not an investigation of the hard problem.
The physical transmission is not an extrinsic representation, it is the medium through which data is transmitted.
If the signals in the nervous system are blocked that shows that the transmission of data is physical.
This makes no sense. An anesthesiologist uses drugs not something mental. She does not rely on hypnosis.
These drugs affect awareness, they disrupt the mind.
This is the crux of the issue for me. I am unconvinced by Schopenhauer's (and Kastrup's derivative) claims that we know the "in-itself" on the basis of some kind of postulated intellectual intuition
this cannot be knowledge but is just a feeling
Another significant problem I have with the idea is that there is a huge body of consistent and coherent scientific evidence that tells us there we many cosmological events long before there were any minds.