I am not confusing two. Please see the above post.Please don't confuse ideas and coherence of the reality. — Corvus
I asked whether idealism can explain the coherence in reality. Yes, or no? If yes, then how? If not, then it is not the proper metaphysical theory of reality!Idealism is not for coherent thoughts. — Corvus
I am interested to know what happens at the neural level when we realize that there are two paths.First, you experience a situation that requires decision-making. Once you're in such a situation, only then do you start examining options. Before that, everything was clear and certain (I was just going forward on this single path), and now I'm weighing my options at the crossroads, hence the uncertainty. — Zebeden
Ok, I will try to make things more clearer for you.I'd like to comment but I'm a bit unclear on the nature of the connection that you wish to make between the two issues that you are raising in your OP. — Pierre-Normand
First, I have to say that De Broglie–Bohm's interpretation of quantum mechanics is correct since it is paradox-free. The motion of particles in this theory is deterministic though. By deterministic I mean given the state of the system at a given point in time the state of the system at a later time is uniquely defined by the former state. So, the motions of particles in the brain are deterministic as well accepting De Broglie–Bohm's theory. What bothers me is that we for sure know that options are real. We also know for sure that the existence of options is due to neural processes in the brain. Neural processes are however deterministic so I am wondering how options can possibly result from neural processes in the brain. I think we can resolve the big problem in the philosophy of mind, the problem is that hard determinists claim that options cannot be real. Of course, the hard determinists cannot be right in this case since we can obviously distinguish between a situation in which there is only one object and another situation in which there are two objects. I studied neural networks in good depth in the past. My memory on neural networks is very rusty now but I would be happy to have your understanding of this topic if you can explain it in terms of neural networks as well. Can we train a neural network to realize between one and two objects and give outputs 1 and 2 respectively? If yes, what does happen at the neural level when it is trained to recognize two objects?There is the issue of reconciling the idea of there being a plurality of options available to an agent in a deterministic world, — Pierre-Normand
Please let's focus on one object first. If we accept the Hebbian theory is the correct theory for learning then we can explain how an infant realizes one object. Once the infant is presented with two objects, she/he can recognize each object very quickly since she/he already memorized the object. How she/he realizes that there are two separate objects is however very tricky and is the part that I don't understand well. I have seen that smartphones can recognize faces when I try to take a photo. I however don't think they can recognize that there are two or more faces though.and the issue of the cognitive development (and the maturation of their visual system) of an infant whereby they come to discriminate two separate objects from the background and from each other. — Pierre-Normand
I tried to elaborate the best I could. Please let me know what you think and ask questions if you have any.Can you make your understanding of this connection more explicit? — Pierre-Normand
I say that you have only one option available when there is only one path available to you.Can't comment on neurological development, but from how I understand what the option is, I would say that an option always requires another option for it to be an option. Only if I know that I can also take the left path, does the right path become an option. Otherwise, it's just a path. Or rather, the path, I should say. — Zebeden
Could you please elaborate here?So my answer would be that the fork always precedes the options. To understand an option, one first experiences a moment of unclarity. — Zebeden
Ok, I see.Same meaning as yours, different words. Both of our words leave 'mind/mental' fairly undefined, leaving open a natural or supernatural interpretation of it. — noAxioms
Reasoning is an analysis of ideas.You are connecting reasoning process to ideas as if they are necessary, but they are not. — Corvus
I asked, how is coherent thought possible in idealism?You see drink in a cup, and think it is coffee. The idea of drink in a cup itself doesn't tell you truth or falsity on your thought. You must drink and taste it to be able to tell it is coffee or tea. Truth or falsity is only possible by your judgement on sense perception (in empirical cases) or thought process (in analytic cases).
Images and concepts themselves don't tell you about coherence of reality. — Corvus
To me will is an ability of the mind. What do you mean by mental processes here?It is your choice since it is a function of your mental processes. — noAxioms
Not at all. The reasoning is based on working on the ideas.You seem to confusing between idea and reasoning. — Corvus
What do you mean by correct here? If you have an idea of a tree then that is just an idea.If you have an idea of tree, then the idea itself cannot tell you it is correct or not. It only gives an image of tree. — Corvus
Why not? Does idealism explain coherence in reality?I am not sure to say that idealism is not correct is a correct statement. — Corvus
What do you mean by this?Ideas are just copy of the objects in the world. — Corvus
I already argued against idealism.Of course, it wouldn't be able to tell you whether they are correct or not. You need your own thinking process, observations, confirmations and logical affirmation to be able to say your ideas were correct or not. — Corvus
I said what I should have said.Math can only do so much. There is a gap and there isn't a gap. There is separation but not such that there is no smooth motion. Sometimes philosophy and logic have to step in where math fails — Gregory
I don't understand what you are trying to say here. I was trying to be simple explaining the existence of options as a mental phenomenon. We are on the same page if you agree that options are real.There are always multiple options. Your examples don't bear that out well since there's one obvious correct answer, but correct answer might not be the reply you want. — noAxioms
I am saying that idealism should not be accepted as a correct metaphysical theory if it cannot explain the coherence in reality.Idealism is not about explaining the coherence in the reality. It is about how we see the reality. — Corvus
According to SEP, there are two main forms of idealism, namely ontological and epistemological, wherein the reality is merely mental in the former whereas in the latter the existence of mind-independent things is accepted. I am arguing against ontological idealism here only since otherwise we are dealing with a form of substance dualism once you accept mind-independent things as well as the mind.And that is a naive depiction of idealism. No idealist philosophy of record will claim that ‘the world is all in the mind’ as you are claiming. — Wayfarer
My knowledge of idealism is limited to what I read from SEP and Wiki a while ago. To the best of my knowledge, the coherence in reality is not discussed in any form of idealism. I would be happy to know if you can cite a form of idealism that discusses coherence in reality.If you want to illustrate the point you’re attempting to make, you’ll need to back it up with some citations from recognised idealist philosophy which say what you’re claiming it says. — Wayfarer
Because we are talking about options. If I present you with one ball, there is only one option available whereas in another case, when you are presented with two balls there are two options.I'm just not following -- why is situation (b) but not situation (a) an illusion? — J
Situation (a): I present you with one ball and ask you how many balls you see. Your answer is one for sure.Sorry, could you clarify? What does "realize between two situations" mean? — J
That is correct. Any real number has decimal and integer parts each is a set of digits, 0 to 9 for example. Digits are of course discrete while the number is continuous.As Hegel says in the lesser logic, you must think of the continuous mixed with the discrete in order to understand either one. — Gregory
I don't think so. I already presented two arguments against the existence of the gap.The continuous is illogical I say. — Gregory
Sure I agree with this. :wink:Great! You at last agree that reductive physicalism is possible. — Relativist
I don't understand what you want me to do. I explicitly mentioned that the Mind experiences and causes a string. By this, I certainly mean vertical causation.Rewrite this while Incorporating the mind's "vertical causality. — Relativist
An object that is made of parts also can be explained and its motion is continuous as well. First, think of an object that is at rest for the sake of simplicity. Its parts are in constant motion and these motions are continuous as I discussed earlier. But parts of the object move in such a way that they persist to exist in the location of the object, let's call these motions M1={m1,m2,...}, where m1 is the motion of the first part, m2 is the motion of the second part, etc. Now we can discuss a moving object. The difference between a moving object and a static object is that parts of the static object have motion M1 only whereas the parts of a moving object have another motion M2. So, the motions of parts of a moving object are N=M1+M2 such that N={n1,n2,...} where n1=m1+M2 is the motion of the first part, n2=m2+M2 is the motion of the second part, etc. I have to say that the object in different instants of time is not the same even if it is at rest since its parts are in constant motion. The object just seems to be the same.OK, that gives a continuity for electrons consistent with a form of perdurantism. But that's a particle, a simple object. Now consider a complex organism, like MoK. There's not a fixed set of particles that comprise comprise you, so you can't base it on particle continuity. I suggest you accept perdurantism for this, instead of essentialism - it would be more consistent. — Relativist
If the space is discrete then it means that there is a gap between two points in space. The gap is the absence of anything or nothing. So there are two arguments here against the existence of the gap: 1) The motion has to be discrete if there is a gap. But discrete motion at least within physicalism is not possible since a particle that is subject to motion and exists in the first point cannot possibly cause another particle in the second point because of the gap. 2) If the gap is nothing then two points must be immediate.Discrete doesn't get lost in itself but takes the step further — Gregory
Thinking is a complex topic, but we can for sure say that it exists. Thinking, however, is a coherent mental phenomenon. To develop a thought one needs to constantly retrieve memories of thoughts accumulated in the past, and work on thoughts to produce a new thought. Thoughts therefore must be memorized somewhere. Idealism cannot provide an answer for where thoughts are stored and how they are retrieved when it is appropriate. Therefore, idealism is false.It would be possible for the thinking to exist without a thinker. — Kranky
Experience for sure exists and everybody agrees with its existence.Even if my own existence cannot be proven, can awareness/experience be proven for certain? — Kranky
The reality is coherent. Therefore, Idealism is false since it cannot account for the coherence. Therefore, you are a person who is typing your thoughts. By person, I mean that you have a body and at least two minds, so-called the conscious and subconscious mind.Right now, at minimum, there is a belief that I am existing, a belief that I am typing this post.
I might not actually be typing this post, nor am I certain to exist.
But it is certain that there is a belief that I exist. — Kranky
Well, it depends if space is continuous or discrete. Which one do you pick?There is no problem when you do it with numbers. The trouble is when infinite digits are linked to spatial slices — Gregory
I am talking about the decimal part of a number. Consider a very small number with many 0 digits and a 1 at the end, like, 0.0...01, where the number of 0 digits is M. If you divide this number by 2 you get, 0.0...05 where the number of 0 digits is M+1. You can do this forever.Each digit represents a slice of space hence infinite space. — Gregory
Space itself is continuous. I don't understand what you are talking about here.Of all the arguments i've amassed over the years, the one that says "something can't be discrete because that implies space which implies parts/slices, and so the descent" has to go. — Gregory
There are basic units for length for example.There has to be a basic unit. — Gregory
Correct. But strings are not the only fundamental entity. The string is a one-dimensional Brane. In principle, you can have a d-dimensional Brane which moves in D-dimensional spacetime, where D>d.This treats strings as fundamental, consistent with reductive physicalism. — Relativist
Correct.But all these "laws of physics" are a consequence of the fundamental laws of strings. — Relativist
There is. I already illustrated it. A stationary electron is a vibrating string, let's call this vibration V1. The string related to a moving electron has another vibration mode due to the motion of the electron, let's call this mode of vibration V2. The Mind experiences both vibrations of the string, V1 and V2, at time t0 and as a result, causes another string at time t1 at a position that is dictated by V2 while keeping V1 the same. The history of the string is held in the subjective time. Its future depends on V2 and the position of the string in the future. So the process of motion of the string is continuous.There is no particle-particle continuity. Each particle is brand new, with no history and no future. — Relativist
It makes sense if you accept that the Mind experiences the string with V1 and causes another string later with the same mode of vibration namely V1. And the string is not annihilated in my theory but just created in the immediate future. So the history of the string is preserved in the subjective time.Makes no sense. The particle at t0 has properties; this particle (with its properties) is annihilated a t1. A new particle exists at t1 that has the same properties, but it's not the same particle. — Relativist
It is V1.Every electron in the universe has the same intrinsic properties. So when a specific electron at t0 is replaced by a "duplicate" at t1, what maked this particular electron the same identity? See my second picture and description, below. — Relativist
It could be essentialism. For example, look at this.All you claims are just vague allusions. The most common bases are: 1) essentialism - which associates an identity with an essence (a subset of properties that are necessary and sufficient for constituting an individual identity) — Relativist
I already mentioned that a part of our brain is hardwired which means it does not change over time. The other part is subject to change always. It is due to this part of the brain that we can memorize new things over time, basically most of our past experiences. The memories however are held in synapses. You might find this article interesting, especially the section about memory.2) perdurance: an identity consisting of a connected series of temporal parts.
Because you embrace identity of the indiscernibles, you don't have the essentialist option. So you need some form of perdurantism, but you need to define what connects the temporal parts. The problem is that you have no direct causal connection between temporal parts. Here's a depiction of what you seem to be claiming with your "vertical causation": — Relativist
The Mind as I discussed above keeps continuity in motion of each electron, quark, etc. Therefore, It keeps continuity in the motion of any object.The mind is creating electron/brain/body at each instant of time, with no direct connection between the "temporal parts". There's an indirect connection through mind, but the mind is simultaneously recreating every electron/brain/body. Let's focus on electrons: there's a universe full of electrons coming into existence at each instant of time. Here's a depiction of 3 electrons (electX,electY, electZ): — Relativist
Electrons are distinguishable to the Mind since each electron has a specific location in space.ElectX@t0->mind->ElectX@t1 is indistinquishable from
ElectX@t0->mind->ElectY@t1 — Relativist
If it is not then there is a situation in which the motion becomes discrete. This is against the continuum hypothesis. Therefore, any continuous motion no matter how small is infinitely divisible.Why must motion be infinitily divided? — Gregory
I am not proposing that I fit an infinity in something finite but saying that any finite distance no matter how small can be divided infinitely. That is what digits are about.How can you fit infinity in the bounds of anything finite? — Gregory
