There is no illusion indistinguishable from reality. — BrianW
BIV is a truth... — TheWillowOfDarkness
There is no point to a position which leaves us without any sort of knowledge. It's just a waste of our time. — TheWillowOfDarkness
...Another difference between reality and illusion is the multifaceted/versatile nature of reality in contrast to the one-sided nature of illusions.... — BrianW
If it's indistinguishable, then it is the same — TheWillowOfDarkness
BIV claims direct access to objective reality — TheWillowOfDarkness
We already know by our experiential lives we are not BIV. The events of my life, my experiences, my body, the interactions I have with other and everything around me, etc., these are not a Brain in a Vat-- I mean, my brain is in my skull. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If we are having "theories" some sort of context of evidence is proposed. We are posing some sort of event or phenomena and then developing description which reflects it. These cannot be outside evidence because they are evidential claims. — TheWillowOfDarkness
A deduction is a species of inference — StreetlightX
Why do speculations not need to be disproven? — Pattern-chaser
Because rationality deals with arguments on the basis of the inferences that are soundly and validly developed in the course of those arguments. — StreetlightX
Stephen Hawking was afflicted later in life, but he is an illustration nevertheless of how misleading the term "disabled" can be. — Baden
Yes, of course you're right. Stephen Hawking should've been drowned at birth, right? :fear: Because he was just a "parasitic drain" on society, right? :fear: Yeah, kill 'em all! :fear: :groan: :cry: :rage: — Pattern-chaser — intrapersona
Yes, of course. A real illusion is, of course, real. — Pattern-chaser
I'm not saying illusions are real. Only that the components of illusion are borrowed from our perception of reality. — BrianW
As to BIV and RL, I would ask that you formulate a personal test for which to recognize the difference between reality and illusion. A kind of litmus test for the difference between the 'texture' of illusion vs that of reality. I believe you will find it impossible to mistake one for the other. — BrianW
Which in the case of disabled people isn't much at all really is it? Are they not like a parasitic drain due to our ethical hesitation? — intrapersona
Lifelong suffering from disability can be prevented yet you want to argue we ought not to intervene with our superior intellects (much in the same way judges do)... — intrapersona
just stories for children playing at philosophy — StreetlightX
Speculations do not need to be disproven — StreetlightX
What grounds do you offer that could be rationally engaged with? — StreetlightX
I beg to differ. Isn't this exactly why we're here, in this forum? :wink:Rationality is not your - or anyone's - play-thing. — StreetlightX
I think your question is worth answering directly. As a preliminary venture. Consider:
BIV Hypothesis (BIV): I have lived a normal life on earth for many years. Last week I was, without realizing it, removed from my body. My brain was placed in a vat of chemicals and hooked up to various electrodes which produce in me sensory experiences just like those I would have if I were still in the ordinary world. For example, I have sensory experiences as if I am in my apartment; as if I am in my office; as if I am eating by the lake. But really, I am never in any of the places my sensory experiences show me to be in. I am a brain-in-a-vat, and I have been for a week, but I never noticed it.
Real Life Hypothesis (RL): I am now in my apartment having sensory experiences of my apartment. In general, my sensory experiences as a fairly accurate guide to my present surroundings. I have never been en-vatted. — PossibleAaran
[My highlighting.]As a general rule any unmotivated question of the form 'is there any reason to think that such-and-such is not the case' can be readily dismissed out of hand. It is the conspiracy theorist's question: "is there any reason to think the Queen is not a lizard?; "is there any reason to think we are not ruled by aliens?";these are not questions to be taken seriously. They are questions to be laughed at and ridiculed. — StreetlightX
In short, It falls to Occam's razor. — hypericin
Putnam's BIV was never about what Pattern-chaser's want it to be. Not even close. It's not an earlier version of the Simulation "theory", never was anywhere close to it, and you are doing a serious disservice to philosophy by spreading this misrepresentation. — Akanthinos
So, how should we treat these speculations? As a critique of our own belief. You do not need to provide evidence to build a critique -- use the other person's evidence if you'd like. — Caldwell
Outside of metaphysics the brain-in-a-vat theory is not as striking. — BrianW
I choose to accept a theory which states that illusion is a part of reality — BrianW
...I do not find it worthy of belief. — Dfpolis
So, please justify your claim. — Dfpolis
we don't have Objective access, so everything you say about "the world" is necessarily speculative, and will always be so. — Pattern-chaser
Of course we have access to our own world. — Dfpolis
It seems to me that possible worlds talk is unnecessary, circular and a source of possible confusion.
First, it is unnecessary. As we can have no epistic access to any world but our own, actual world, anything we can learn, we can learn from the real world. — Dfpolis
We could probably prove God is a Panda using similar methods. — Baden
Does it really matter whether we call it a thought experiment, a theory, a hypothesis or a fairy story? — Pattern-chaser
It matters. — Caldwell
Yes, it does matter. It is the topic. There are some moves which are permissible against a theory and which have no purchase whatsoever on a thought experiment. For example, questioning the likelihood. — Akanthinos
:blush: :smile:I’ve intentionally avoided this thread because it addresses a darn good, and very complex, question. Compliments to the chef. — javra
The BIV scenario, as far as I can comprehend, is one asking how we can justify that we are not BIVs. Maybe this can be justified. My best go at it in a nutshell: The very idea of being a BIV is dependent on there being such a thing as real brains, wirings, and computers. Yet if we were BIVs, then all our empirical data would be bogus by entailment of so being BIVs. — javra
Me too! :up:All the same, I’d like to read of other logical reasons for dismissing some philosophical conundrums but not others. — javra
The Brain in the Vat is that it doesn't actually explain anything new. It doesn't answer any questions. It just proposes a scenario which is theoretically consistent with any set of observations. — hypericin
I think the brain-in-a-vat example is a very intelligent thought experiment. However, it ignores the reality of our perception. While most of our perception relates to our senses directly, there is a level of perception which seems to be beyond them. I mean instances where we meet a person and we perceive them as compatible/incompatible or as having some kind of good/ill intentions, etc. Intuition and gut-feeling may not be right all the time or exactly scientific but the accuracy and the degree of dependability by the instinctive mechanism is quite telling. — BrianW
My default position in the absence of evidence to the contrary is that it would require a slightly different brain to 'run' a female body than to 'run' a male one. — Pseudonym
If they exist you should be able to assert what they are. How can something biological exist but defy definition? — Pseudonym
Known to many of us here: HItchen's razor: "What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." — tim wood
↪Pattern-chaser
Because it's not simple and not settled. — Moliere