Obviously you have not seen them getting asked, and giving out their replies. That doesn't follow that they don't make claims on these issues. Other possibility could be that they don't make claims on them because they don't know?Realism itself makes no claims about God or souls or unicorns or Santa clause — flannel jesus
Isn't experience always about something? I used to think that way, but maybe you have idea on experience in general, or experience which is not about something. What would it be from your idea?First, let me ask you for a brief elaboration of your own view: what is 'experience' if it is not of something, under your view? That way I can provide some worries I may have with your intuitions and evidence. — Bob Ross
Ok fair enough. Quite disappointed on your "vulgar" nature of response in hysterical tone. Enjoy your own recommended readings yourself."Proof?" I make no positive claim that requires "proof"; simply there are no compelling grounds to even consider that the world is "a long vivid dream or some realistic illusion or hallucination", and therefore, the existence of the world remains self-evident or presupposed by all other true statements of fact. Your OP raises a perennial pseudo-question (à la "Cartesian doubt"), Corvus, and maybe as a cure for what's ailing you, consider Peirce's "The Fixation on Belief" and Wittgenstein's On Certainty. — 180 Proof
Solipsism sounds controversial, but then the alternatives don't sound much better, do they?The thought experiment about Solipsism is, of course, endlessly relevant because it can't be disproven. As far as I know, there's no sequence of experiences or observations one could have to prove this isn't all a figment of your imagination, or a virtual world full of NPCs created to keep you entertained and docile, or any number of other infinite fake-world ideas. — flannel jesus
Treatise of Human Nature Part IV. p.188 - p.218Which passages are you referring to? — Paine
How did you manage to perceive the unperceived cup first place, which caused your belief and memory on the unperceived cup?I believe in the unperceived cup each time I remember it in my mind. Absent the thought, the belief is absent. — Throng
Most of our beliefs can be unfounded and groundless. But we could try to figure out which beliefs are groundless and which are warranted by evidence beliefs. This is partly what the OP is about suppose.The error of assumption is regarding belief as a permanent object - let alone the cup. — Throng
I suppose there are many alternative worlds existing out there to believe in too. I asked ChatGPT for type of the alternative worlds available for us. So, the traditional earth bound world is not the only world existing out there. But then would you have to decide on which world is the real one, which are fake and bogus worlds?The brain can't tell the difference between a self-generated world and an exogenous one. We almost always automatically believe the world that we are presented with, real or not. It appears that we are 'programmed' to believe in something, no matter what. — punos
Does that mean that when observation is not operational, do you stop believing in the existence of the world during the time of no observation? If you keep believing in the existence when the observation stopped, what is it that forces you into the belief?Ordinary observation. Or if you want a more formal word - empiric. — L'éléphant
How do you know the admission is true, not mistaken or unfounded? From whose point of view is the admission being performed, and proved?Perception is conscious activity -- not in deep sleep. So, if you're asleep, you're not making a judgment like "I don't believe the cup exists when it's not in front of me." Let's settle on that. You're awake, and you're making a claim that you don't have a reason to believe an object exists when you're not looking at it. This is you admitting that you exist. — L'éléphant
This seems a very unfairly asymmetrical question. Why would someone need proof that it's not a dream, but not need proof that it is a dream? — flannel jesus
Can you control or decide what and how you dream during deep sleep? I thought it is impossible for one to control, think, decide in one's dream. Isn't the content of dream totally random in nature, and you have absolutely no control over it?No, I think that believing in the existence of the world, during deep sleep, is what turns pleasant dreams into nightmares. — Metaphysician Undercover
hmmm... The problems of death seem still to be a mysterious topic. Are the dead totally really dead? I was under impression, they are dead physically, but might not be dead in soul. Might not be dead doesn't mean they are alive either. It just means we don't know.And believing in the world when one is dead seems to be impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can try to present some worries with that intuition if you would like. — Bob Ross
Is reason an activity that exists while nothing else does? Is that activity something that can be known without reference to beings? I doubt that. — Paine
Your own opinions and views are most appreciated, but there is no reason why you shouldn't agree to, or follow the historical philosopher's views, ideas and systems, if that is what you do synchronise with in the ideology.Others have responded to your question much better than I can but I would like to know what answer would you find satisfactory? — Captain Homicide
What is the "more reason" in detail that entail the belief?but as I said we have more reason to believe those things than that the universe is a simulation and everyone but you is a meat robot without actual sentience. — Captain Homicide
Well, this notion of craving for self-sameness as nihilistic and life-denying is discussed by Nietzsche in terms of the ascetic ideal in his Genealogy of Morals. — Joshs
Apologies for not reading the thread and perhaps repeating what's already been said. As far as Im concerned, "the reason for believing in the exisrence of the world" is that there aren't any compelling grounds to doubt the existence of world. :smirk: — 180 Proof
I maintain there is reason to believe the world exists when I’m not perceiving it, which is all I ever meant to comment on. — Mww
Sure, and one of the popular interpretations of QM is the Many Worlds Interpretation. I agree with Bernardo Kastrup that positing the existence of huge numbers of universes popping into existence all the time is a huge violation of Occam's Razor. Why don't the people who believe in the MWI just believe in idealism instead? — RogueAI
That's funny, I've used Occam's Razor to come to the opposite conclusion: the simplest explanation to explain things like the Hard Problem of Consciousness, and the correct interpretation of QM is to assume matter doesn't exist. — RogueAI
The first thought that occurred to me was: Why would we need a reason to believe the world exists? Reason suffers when such unreasonable demands are put on it. Such doubt only arises when reason is abstracted and treated as if it were independent from our being in the world. — Fooloso4
Nietzsche believed any attempt to nail down truth as a repeatedly producible self-same thing, foundation, ground or telos, destroys meaning and value. — Joshs
Gravity is a constant reminder. Biology never turns off. These worldly constants are always in our perceptual space and can never be not perceived. — NOS4A2
If fact, what you seem to be getting at goes way beyond Berkley or Kant or any other idealist. Very few of them say that the world does not exist if we are not perceiving it. They take it for granted. — Manuel
So, this question of proof could be asked of your proposal. What is self-evidently given such that it provides the grounds for believing or not believing our experiences? Upon what grounds is your doubt more than a subtraction from what is given to you? — Paine
Indeed, you have.
I am confident that you turn off the gas and lock the door before bed, just in case untoward things happen while you are asleep.
In that way, your account is an affectation. — Banno
Stretching it too far. Hope it is not your projection defence mechanism activation.Frankly this thread is a manifestation of ↪Ciceronianus's question concerning affectation. — Banno
You suddenly brought the pendulum into the discussion out of the blue saying that, I was not paying attention, and it is problem. And I was just saying, No, that is not the case, and explained the situation logically. :)As I pointed out, your philosophy protects itself against counter examples. But we can trace back the thread of this conversation. — Banno
Really? Fascinating. Thank you for your effort writing the substantial post on Nietzsche in conjunction with the topic. I have not been reading him for a while, but will get back to it sometime in the near future for sure. I think he is a great writer.Your body still perceives the world in sleep, in fact your dreams can be lead on by nouns in the real world. The fact that many a thing can stir a person from their sleep is proof that even your unconscious body KNOWS something is occurring. — Vaskane
Yeah, you can, from anywhere you can see a Foucault pendulum.
See, trouble is, you are not paying attention. — Banno
You cannot observe the earth rotating around visually sitting on any point on the earth. :)Uhh... I'm not sure about that. Unless the proof started with:
"Let there be astronomical observations equivalent with the empirical observations we have made.... — Count Timothy von Icarus
My example was against your point that you would rather take a more supported and seeming option rather than a less supported and unlikely option. The OP was asking what your reasons to believe in the existence of the world are, while not perceiving it.So, your own example is an argument against your own OP. — Manuel
That sounds like a statement from misunderstanding existence from motion.Maybe the Earth only turns round when we look at said evidence and is flat the rest of the time? :nerd: — Count Timothy von Icarus
Could you prove why the belief in the world's existence is prior to any doubt on behalf of Hume? Do you believe he is justified in saying that? i.e. why reason doesn't do that acceptance in the series of formal statements or a priori set of conditions - I think we need detailed elaboration on this assertion.Hume is saying that reason does not do that acceptance in the sense of a series of formal statements or a priori set of conditions. The belief in the world's existence is prior to any doubt. — Paine
