I don't know who you are referring to nor do I understand what you are trying to say in your second sentence. — Janus
You gave it as a justification for your belief. — Janus
Reason is nothing without its basic presuppositions, which are not themselves arrived at, or justified by, reason. — Janus
Bob, morality is by definition, historical convention, and common sense related to human actions. Do you not see that by redefining morality in this way you are completely altering its fundamental meaning? — Pantagruel
you are trying to describe a type of goodness that is related though different from moral goodness proper, and calling it "moral goodness" confuses your argument — Lionino
If a Carnot cycle is, by definition, 100% efficient, isn't saying "perfect Carnot cycle" redundant too? — Down The Rabbit Hole
Ah. So this is that sense of perfection that precludes objective existence. Like a perfect vacuum. Or a perfect circle. Really more of a Platonic ideal. — Pantagruel
For me, that is an argument from authority, which I don't accept, so we are going to disagree on this. — Janus
Actually, I think the argument from language(s) makes solipsism most highly implausible. Did you invent the English language and write all the poetry and literature that exists without even being aware of doing it, using many words you don't even know the meaning of.
Did you invent all of mathematics and science, which use countless concepts and theorems you don't even understand, without being aware of having done so? What about all the other languages? — Janus
Questioning the background of our experiences is incoherent, since it presupposes the background of our experiences in the very act of questioning. — Janus
Published by the Journal of High Energy Physics - what's the problem? — Banno
Schwinger effect — Double H
An argument that regular observers are more common than Boltzmann observers:
http://www.arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0611271 — Banno
In terms of an example, imagine a two rocks just laying there on top of a table vs. two rocks violently colliding with each other constantly: the former is in a state of harmony and unity, while the latter is clearly not. — Bob Ross
Nobody disagrees on that.whether something is a member of itself or not is determined by whether it is in its own set or not — Philosopher19
Again, your argument is nonsensical. It does not mean anything in mathematics.My argument is that A is not a member of itself in B because A is a member of B in B. — Philosopher19
This is just repeating the same semantic nonsense.If we view the z of all zs as a z, it is a member of itself. If we view the z of all zs as a v, it is a member of the v of all vs — Philosopher19
Consider this strengthened argument:
1. If we are not Boltzmann brains then our scientific theories are true
2. One of our scientific theories is that we are most likely Boltzmann brains
3. Therefore, if we are not Boltzmann brains then the scientific theory that we are most likely Boltzmann brains is true
Do you see the problem with (3)? — Michael
It's right there in that post you responded to:
1. If we are not Boltzmann brains then we can trust our scientific knowledge
2. Our scientific knowledge strongly suggests that we are most likely Boltzmann brains
3. Therefore, if we are not Boltzmann brains then we are most likely Boltzmann brains — Michael
if this is so how could we trust our scientific theories, or even trust that we remember them correctly, or that they were ever really formulated? — Janus
Hume merely showed that induction is not deduction, that inductive inferences are no necessary — Janus
Is it just because they are still around, because some people are still arguing about them? — Janus
You mean all the ones you, in your opinion, successfully rebutted? — Janus
I didn't think it was nonsensical — Pantagruel
So who has built one of these perfect Carnot machines in actuality? — Pantagruel
it doesn't explain how a random fluctuation like a Boltzman brain could come up with consistent and coherent scientific theories that show that it is most likely a Boltzmann brain — Janus
The way I see it is that something should be thought to be less likely if it is less plausible in light of our experience, less consistent with that experience, and to my way of thinking solipsism seem way less likely, in fact improbable in the extreme, in light of that experience. — Janus
Which arguments in this thread do you see failing and on what basis do you assess them as failures? — Janus
The internet is young, sure, but Aristotle is Aristotle, I'd think there'd be more exhaustive discussions behind the nitty gritty of his works than most other philosophers — Pretty
I was presenting the inverse of his argument to show that his position suffers from that same cognitive instability. — Michael
1. If we are not Boltzmann brains then we can trust our scientific knowledge
2. Our scientific knowledge strongly suggests that we are most likely Boltzmann brains
3. Therefore, if we are not Boltzmann brains then we are most likely Boltzmann brains
There's certainly some "cognitive instability" in his position, too. — Michael
How about a Boltzmann universe? — Michael
However, etymology in English --and I believe other languages too-- is often complex and even useless — Alkis Piskas
People ignore or even hate dictionaries in general. — Alkis Piskas
You could replace the word "perfect" with efficient and your description of the machine would lose nothing. — Pantagruel
and the latter is perfection in-itself (i.e., a good organism, clock, phone, plant, etc. is one which is in harmony and unity with itself) — Bob Ross
and the latter moral goodness — Bob Ross
Morality, then, in its most commonly used sense, is simply an attempt at sorting out how one should behave in correspondence to how one can best align themselves with universal harmony and unity — Bob Ross
Moral agents are those agents expected to meet the demands of morality. Not all agents are moral agents. Young children and animals, being capable of performing actions, may be agents in the way that stones, plants and cars are not. But though they are agents they are not automatically considered moral agents. For a moral agent must also be capable of conforming to at least some of the demands of morality. — https://www.rep.routledge.com/articles/thematic/moral-agents/v-1
I never said A can't be both a member of A and B. I said, in A, A is a member of A/itself, and in B, A is a member of B/other-than-itself. — Philosopher19
:up:The word "paradox" comes from ancient Greek "para" (= besides, contrary to) + "doxa" (= opinion). Indeed, it indicates something that exists or happens which is contrary to what one expects or believes to be true or happen. For example, a paradox would be raining without any cloud in the sky. Yet, it is possible, if there are very strong winds that bring rain from some other place than where we are. — Alkis Piskas
In what sense does this imply that the machine is perfect? — Pantagruel
As you say, the word "lift" has its job in the name. Would any lift that can lift be a perfect lift?
I don't think most people would call a really slow, smelly, uncomfortable, ugly lift "perfect". — Down The Rabbit Hole
No, it doesn't, but it might reduce the solipsist to the status of a mere object of ridicule. — Banno
That is, in both these cases, as in the case of the existence of the world, there may be a point at which one's credulity is strained a bit too far. That point will be different for different folk, some of whom never participate in philosophy fora, some who treat it as an amusement and a very few who take it seriously enough to find themselves in an asylum.
So perhaps all up it is not unreasonable to take things at face value? — Banno
Solipsism is a philosophical idea. It is a language construct. — creativesoul
Solipsism cannot be defeated with certainty, but it is defeated by plausibility. You say, "in the case that I think there is no world", but no one or almost no one thinks that due to its implausibility. The issue of solipsism only gets raised because we cannot be, as with many other things, absolutely certain it is not the case. — Janus
So if the world around me is somehow a construct of my mind, it is very different to other mental constructs. — Banno
So different that one might be tempted to call it "real"? — Banno
We have to define a goal for there to be any objectivity. — Down The Rabbit Hole
that discussion performatively, if not logically, presupposes the existence of a mutually experienced world external to the body — Janus
Where there has never been language use, there could have never been any discussion such as this one. It does not matter if one believes that or not. — creativesoul
In the case that I think there is no world, it follows that I believe that everything around me is merely a projection of my mind (or simply is my mind). If I also believe that I am here discussing for a purpose, it could very well be that I believe that I am interacting with the very contents of my mind — Lionino
Sure. It's based in a very odd notion of "valid". And, for that matter, of "human mind". — Banno
probably for another thread.
Well, the thread is about the world, not about solipsism — Banno
probably for another thread — Banno
By century’s end, 183 of 195 countries, barring an influx of immigrants, will have fallen below the replacement threshold needed to maintain population levels, it said. — Agree-to-Disagree
You're obviously not someone who has ever thought about writing in general — Vaskane
A basic high school advanced composition class should teach you these things. It's fairly common knowledge. — Vaskane
I would say that it might not logically presuppose the existence of a world, but that it does pragmatically presuppose it — Janus
No one really believes they are the only person or that there is no external (to the body) world — Janus
If I also believe that I am here discussing for a purpose, it could very well be that I believe that I am interacting with the very contents of my mind — Lionino
I bet if you put the cyber equivalent of a ravenous rat in its face like in '1984' then you could break it. Would say anything, begging like HAL 9000. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Still follows grammatical rules just fine — Vaskane
And if you knew a bit about English history, you'd know the rules for English grammar died in 1066, and it mostly became about WORD ORDER — Vaskane
Is our civilization unbalanced? — 0 thru 9