Whatever I experience I experience as an idea in my mind — philosophy
it is impossible to perceive an unperceived object by definition. — philosophy
belief in the external world, i.e. a world independent of my experience of it, cannot be based on reason but on faith. — philosophy
Do you think such a view can be refuted? — philosophy
A paradox is indicative that you have an underlying logic error. — Devans99
There is a logical problem with something you can add to and not change. — Devans99
it just says an infinite set exists without actually proving anything. — Devans99
Potential infinity (as in calculus's limit concept) is a great tool. Actual infinity (as in set theory's transfinite nonsense) is not a usual tool; it just leads to paradoxes. Cantor's paradox, Galileo's paradox, Hilbert's hotel etc... — Devans99
I think the only useful way to think about mind (or strictly speaking the rational intellect) is in terms of 'that which interprets meaning'.
What Dennett argues, is that what we interpret as subjective experience, is really the result of the unconscious competence of billions of cellular automata that give rise to the illusion of the subject. — Wayfarer
Dennett asks us to turn our backs on what is glaringly obvious—that in consciousness we are immediately aware of real subjective experiences
I see.I don't think the mind is a thing.
So what theory of the mind do you subscribe to?It's the result of brain activity in addition to the context of an animal or human in their environment
If the universe is a "thing" then we conclude that it has a beginning in time
What is meant by #3 is that the existence of things are contingent, and that they are temporal, meaning that they have a beginning and ending in time.
#3 seems to treat existence as a property that something may have as either potentially or actually, similar to the potential for hotness. And that just as something that is actually hot "activates" the potential for hotness in another object, so to something that exists activates the potential for existence in another. — Mitchell
1.) Change occurs (and this cannot be coherently denied - the denial of change is itself a form of change, for example)
It seems like what premise 2 and 3 are saying is that change exists only if "actuality" and "potentiality" exist, but this does not seem obvious at all; consider this alternative: change is the inherent nature of the universe and that for every event there is a temporally precedent event that is its cause.2.) Material objects that change can only do so because they have potentials that have been actualized
3.) A potential cannot be actualized except by something already actual.