Realism asserts that the existents in question are extra-mental/independent of mind. — Terrapin Station
You could be an anti-realist materialist if you were to think that only minds exist, — Terrapin Station
NOTE: No one seems to be able to agree on what exactly the word “realism” actually means. — Aaron R
He’s no better or worse than the idealist who ultimately does the same. — Aaron R
But that is the point; if everything is thought to be nothing more than dreams within dreams then there could be no reason not to push the button since the quality of experience would be so much better for everyone. — John
1. If someone says 'No' then they could not be committed to anti-realism, or phenomenalism.
2. if someone says 'No' then they could not be committed to truth relativism.
3. If someone says 'No' then they could not be committed to the Postmodern notion (a la Baudrillard) that reality is a simulacrum. — John
It's not so much about consequentialism, as it is about believed consequences of an infant's (or other innocent child's) death. Neither is it about throwing Abrahamic religions in the bin. It's about analyzing real-life beliefs, irrespective of any (perceived) controversy. — jorndoe
How could the fleece be hay-independent if the hay is part of the fleece. — Metaphysician Undercover
It was suggested that the world is something which exists independent of minds, and also that I am a part of this world. To begin with, that appears contradictory to me, unless I don't have a mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is this "world" which I am supposed to be part of?. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's what I am asking. I'm not the one claiming the reality of "the world", I'm the one asking what that means. — Metaphysician Undercover
I remember my father giving me propaganda booklets made by the KGB when coming back from a trip from the Soviet Union. — ssu
Show me 1 actual inmate who was sentenced to 7 years in prison for simple pot possession — Hanover
But what's probably mind-dependent is whether something is a sentence, or whether a sentence expresses a certain proposition. So, if you were to define a notion of sentence truth, it would be mind-dependent whether a sentence is true, in virtue of its being mind-dependent what proposition it expressed. — The Great Whatever
Second, defining truth in this way is, as I've already said, not relevant to the point of what I was saying to begin with. — The Great Whatever
Says who? — The Great Whatever
Truth is unanalyzable.So 'true' could be defined as a relation between sentences and contexts. — The Great Whatever
Then you can just define the relation with an argument for context, and have truth of a sentence relative to a context. This isn't important to the point. — The Great Whatever
I recall Jostein Gaarder writing such a thing in one of his books. — Michael
Just as the existence of a fake reality is generally considered unlikely, it is also unlikely that your trustworthy friend Aleksey would mislead you. Nevertheless, your first instinct might be to believe that Aleksey is mistaken, rather than to believe that you are a Powerball winner, since it is logical for you to favor the least unlikely explanation for the unlikely events that have occurred. — Josh
Suppose I win the powerball lottery with a single ticket. The odds of this are 1 in 292,201,338. If I win, isn't it more reasonable to doubt reality than to assume that I actually won the lottery against such enormous odds? — Josh
It really doesn't matter. If a sentence has a conventional semantic content that can be modeled as a proposition, the sentence can express the proposition in that any utterance of it will express that proposition. — The Great Whatever
You're just defining the relation arbitrarily narrowly — The Great Whatever
To deny this would be to say that for any arrangement of things in the world that logically or conceivably could be interpreted, according to some imaginary linguistic system, in a certain way, in fact already is: and so you'd be forced to say that basically everything is a sentence, and everything expresses every conceivable proposition, always (since there will always be a logically conceivable linguistic convention that could be so arranged). — The Great Whatever
This discussion was created with comments split from Religious experience has rendered atheism null and void to me — Sapientia