And who claims that anything interacts with nothing? — Terrapin Station
You're reading it Aspie-like so that it's suggesting that to you. That's not the idea. — Terrapin Station
"independent" isn't referring to "not influenced or controlled in any way" per the laws of physics, for example, because then there would obviously not be any independent thing. — Terrapin Station
"Things" require thingers to thing them !
The apparent persistence and independence of 'things' is promoted by the abstract persistence and independence of the words we use to conceptualise aspects of what we call 'the world'. — fresco
I agree with your general thrust. However, the interaction of things does not in and of itself define whether they are "independent." And that is especially true when one contrasts independent with dependent. I may well interact with my television remote, but that does not make me dependent upon my television remote. And I could choose to never interact with it be independent of it. — Arne
"Independent" doesn't imply "incorrigibly isolated and not capable of interaction." — Terrapin Station
But the truly sad thing is that even if these phenomena are real, they are merely assuming that it would go against current science. It could simply be forces, phenomena, realms, whatever, that haven't been detectable, so far, by scientific measuring, and which do not contradict what we know about other phenomema they have been able to track.
Some says ghosts are real. Scientists immediately make assumptions about the necessary ontology of ghosts, then conclude that it goes against current science. But within there own history, changes have come that put earlier models into more restricted frames (but do not eliminate them) or change some of the metaphysics of the science but not the use of the former knowledge - say in the example of Einstein demonstrating false assumptions in Newton, but not at all reducing the effectiveness of Newtons theorums in their contexts. And their assumption that it must be a binary winner take all clash is as radically speculative as they accuse their opponents of being. — Coben
Perhaps your writings made while under the influence of hallucinatory substances do not make sense now because they did not make sense then. Altering your mind does not allow you to see things that you cannot see without the altering, or make sense of writings that you cannot makes sense of any other way.
Rather, you are seeing things that are not there, and making sense of nonsensical language use. — creativesoul
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) before and after treatment with psilocybin (serotonin agonist) for treatment-resistant depression (TRD). Quality pre and post treatment fMRI data were collected from 16 of 19 patients. Decreased depressive symptoms were observed in all 19 patients at 1-week post-treatment and 47% met criteria for response at 5 weeks
Just curious what those experiences and observations were. — Terrapin Station
If we're talking past each other or living in different realities, then how can you say that we are disagreeing? Agreements and disagreements would be incoherent. Your view loses any distinction between delusions and any other kind of thought. And if we can only talk past each other, then what is the point of talking at all? Why should anyone care about your's or anyone else's subjective "truths"?
Its so funny to watch you claim that truths are subjective while in the same post you go about telling how it is for all of us not just yourself. From my point of view you are simply maintaining your own delusion of having your cake and eating it too.
All you have done this entire thread is render your own posts and ideas as useless because they don't apply to anyone else's reality except yours. — Harry Hindu
The idea of not weighing in on the possibility seems completely lost. It is as if they must draw a conclusion now. And that conclusion will be in the negative.. — Coben
Personally, I am convinced that we can deduce from the cogito - despite problems with "Who is this 'I'?", and so forth - that something has actual (Objective) existence. Therefore Objective Reality exists, and that something is all or part of it. — Pattern-chaser
This problem, of course, is due to the conflation of truth and meaning. The 'official' semantics of our shared language is too coarse and inflexible to accommodate the idiosyncrasies of every person's bespoke use and interpretation of their national language. One can imagine a futuristic society in which each person's private dialect of their national language is publicly translatable into every other person's private dialect. If in addition the causes of every person's utterances were also understood, then every utterance in the language could be publicly interpreted as being necessarily correct. — sime
Don't forget to answer: "You'd say that you're more certain that the experiences stem from a world that doesn't exist aside from our minds?" — Terrapin Station
Yes, as far as truth is concerned, perspectivism is unavoidable. But that isn't to say that I necessarily believe in the possibility of first-person centered epistemology. A far as epistemology is concerned, the 'third-person' subject seems unavoidable, in so far as knowledge is communicable representation. — sime
I can enumerate for you an infinite number of objectively true propositions. I will start with one:
This is objectively true. It is objective because I can easily create a truth-table to show its relevant truth-conditions for any truth-value assignments for and . It is true because this sentence is true on any possible truth-value assignments. That is, it is a logical truth.
Now let be an enumeration of infinitely many propositions with different contents. It is easy to see that:
Is a logical truth and, so, both objective and true. Further,
is also objective and true for the same reasons. — Kornelius
I can equally generate many empirical sentences that are both objective and true. For example, "More than two lions exist in Africa at this moment", where we can qualify "this moment" with the precise time of my writing. There are so many propositions of this sort. — Kornelius
Wait, is that telling me why you'd pick one option over other options? — Terrapin Station
And the reason that you'd pick that option is? — Terrapin Station
From where are you getting the notion of someone positing "passive observers of a world that doesn't (in any way) depend on us"? — Terrapin Station
An Objective statement is one that correctly describes some aspect of Objective Reality, i.e. that which actually is. A statement correctly identified as Objective cannot be challenged or doubted because there is no possibility of it being wrong. And that is the "more" you asked for. :smile:
The silliness comes in when we remember that Objective statements cannot be correctly made by humans, except to say that Objective Reality exists. — Pattern-chaser
Because we're no longer infants. Our brains have developed past a stage where we believe that we're the entirety of the world, so that if we cover ourselves in a blanket, we've effectively disappeared, where we believe that the world is centered on us, and where we are not capable of understanding different from ourselves. — Terrapin Station
Why would the existence of something like a rock hinge on anything about us? — Terrapin Station
ultimately it is environmental feedback, experience and reason that determines an individual's concept of truth — sime
The sentence "The sky is orange" is objective. It is objective because it is truth-evaluable. It happens to be false, but so be it. — Kornelius
Yes, we need objective truth. That is why we have science, engineering, philosophy and common sense. — Frotunes
Objectivity is basic, in areas which it is applicable, like journalism, history, jurisprudence, and many more. For instance, you wouldn't read an account of the Holocaust by a Holocaust-denier, as his/her opinions would clearly be tendentious. If your daughter was in a talent quest, you wouldn't expect to be called as a judge. And so on. Yes, they're perfectly mundane examples, but that's part of the point. — Wayfarer
What is meant by "access"? I suppose in some sense of "access" everyone has access to the objective truth, and in another sense, they don't. — PossibleAaran
You first need to distinguish truth from objectivity; the difference being that the latter is dependent upon linguistic convention. — sime
First re "If no one can access it, it's an idea."
Say that there's a particular rock on a planet a million light years away. It turns out that we're the only technological creatures in the universe, and some catastrophe wipes us out soon. Is that rock on a distant planet just an idea? — Terrapin Station
What is objective is the truth. It is objective that the Earth is a sphere, not flat, despite what people believed, or still believe. — Harry Hindu
If I were to say that there is only objective truth, am I right or wrong in disagreeing with you? — Harry Hindu
Your beliefs are such that they exist independent of what I think or believe about them. — Harry Hindu
If there is no objective truth, then why do so many people on this forum feel the need to quote other philosophers as if those other philosophers hold some truth about others than just the philosopher being quoted? — Harry Hindu
An Objective Truth is true. It cannot be challenged or doubted. It's a lot more than "something everyone agrees on". — Pattern-chaser
I feel like throwing my life away at the moment. I have no reason to live, (pretty much disabled for life given my diagnosis), and looking forward to death. I have my mother whom I don't want to impose more grief on; but, life seems so uninteresting, that I am seriously contemplating suicide. It has been on my mind for some 15 years now, and it's getting really tiring waiting on death to knock on my door. — Wallows
Well, at this point I'm not even sure if our lawyer is on our side, given his attitude. — Wallows
The way things are going in court, it looks like it will be a 50/50 split between both my mother and father. My mother and I live under the poverty level, and I'm not sure what will persuade the judge to give us a favorable share of the house. — Wallows
My father hasn't contributed a penny to pay for the mortgage of the house or any financial help since he divorced my mother some 15 years ago. My mother never got alimony or anything out of the divorce in another country — Wallows
I have created a new thread starting with your response, as it's tangential to the topic of this thread - is it OK if I post that? — Wayfarer
How do you deal with the claim that this is simply relativism, that the only truth we can know is the truth 'for us'? — Wayfarer
Now you can see that modern science in a sense is striving for that ‘common world’ also, which is the world of primary objects and forces that can be shown to be ‘the same for all observers’. This notion is elaborated in great detail on Thomas Nagel’s important book, The View from Nowhere (review here.) Again, the particular contribution of modern scientific method was to bracket out the individual, the subjective, by discerning what could be quantified and validated by all observers. Or that was the theory. But as Nagel says, ‘Among philosophers of mind, the prevalent form of objective blindness is a cult of the method of the physical sciences, which leads in extreme cases to the outright denial of subjectivity. — Wayfarer
This is strongly connected to the original post. The faith you speak of, is the faith that reality is physical and objective, or in any case, is amenable to discovery by the sciences. — Wayfarer
I think the solution lies in the direction of ‘transcending subjectivity’ i.e. transcending the sense of self-hood, but not on the basis of according sole reality to the so-called ‘objective domain’. That’s the sense in which it is basically a spiritual quest. — Wayfarer
You may have already looked at this, but in case not:
https://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/ge/mach.htm — g0d
And this dude resisted the theory of the atom. That's how skeptical he was. Was his passion for understanding not spiritual somehow? — g0d
But what can it mean for you to say what you said above? About what is it true? — g0d
Is it meaningless for us to talk about a single reality? Or just for you? For me there's a performative contradiction in arguing against a single reality. Or rather the good arguments against a single reality are well aimed at bad conceptualizations of the single reality. — g0d
The single reality I have in mind is manifest in the very structure of our communication, the same communication we use to give artificial names to it like the 'physical.' — g0d
We are both (partially) 'here' ---wherever or whatever 'here' is. — g0d
But even philosophers appeal to 'world' as I intend it. 'World' is what our philosophical theses describe. 'There is no single reality' is aimed at some kind of a single reality, since otherwise it would have no use. We who speak only have reason to talk and listen inasmuch as we are in a single reality/world which we can inform one another about. — g0d
That is the post my post you are responding is a response to — Janus
I largely agree. If we take 'mind-independent' in a sharp, metaphysical sense. But I think the opposite position fails for the same reason. What is the 'mind' but experience of the 'world' or 'non-mind'? — g0d
If 'mind-independent reality' is a contradiction, then that only matters if it's a contradiction for us. What is it that is 'for us' and 'not just me' that grounds intelligible conversation? You and I have to share a language and a sense of logic to even discuss the issue. So being in language together is (I argue) being in a 'world' together. — g0d
In the quote above, you open with There are. What is in this 'are'? 'Reality is socially constructed' seems to want to tell me about reality, about 'real' reality. — g0d
The only explanation for this other than that doorways etc. really are where we perceive them to be is that our minds, including animal minds, are all connected in some indiscernible and unimaginable way. If the latter explanation is what you want to go for then I think you need to posit God or a universal mind or something along those lines. But then you also need to provide some reason why we should think that to be a more plausible explanation than the idea that things simply exist in their own right. — Janus
Is this even true of realists who like philosophy? Of course there are rude people around. — g0d
We only never see things as they are if we insist that reality is hidden. You claim there is an apple in the cabinet. We both check and it's gone. Then we theorize about what happened. What can't we call that apple real? Must we call its molecules real instead? Why aren't those molecules just another aspect of the same apple? — g0d
For me the issue is that you imply that the theory of mind-independent reality could be wrong. Wrong in relation to what? — g0d
The more natural response for an intellectually curious realist would be to investigate why the new person thinks differently to the others given that they're all interacting in the same world. — Andrew M
If Alice thinks that she and the people she encounters are real (actually existing as a thing or occurring in fact; not imagined or supposed (OED)), then she will model them as being real. Similarly, if others accept that her reported observations and experiences are real (not as imagined or supposed), then they will also model those people as being real. — Andrew M
The point was not that our experiences are exactly the same, but that we perceive the same objects and that it can easily be shown that we can all agree about precise qualities and features of those objects. I can only imagine two possible explanations; one is that the objects are mind-independent and the other is that our minds are all connected together in some unknown way. — Janus
But then we cannot explain how it is that we all experience the same world of things, given that our experience tells us that our minds are not directly connected at all. — Janus
What kind of "access" do you expect? How could we have any kind of access that wouldn't be dismissed as being "merely experiential"? — Janus
What is the deeper 'why' that you mention? — g0d
The physical processes involved in bringing about the seeing of colour are well understood. — Janus
Why should we expect to have a physicalist explanation of something that cannot be objectified or measured? — Janus