So for some statement about things that exist to be true, it must be apparent to some conscious mind, mustn't it? — Banno
Not sure what that means. — Banno
if idealism is the position that only minds and mental phenomena exist, then any truth about things that exist must be a truth about minds and mental phenomena. — Banno
Try this: if idealism is the position that only minds and mental phenomena exist, then any truth about things that exist must be a truth about minds and mental phenomena.
Do you agree? — Banno
I don't see how this can be maintained. If idealism is the position that only minds and mental phenomena exist, then idealism is the position that only statements concerning minds and mental phenomena can be true. — Banno
Not at all. Isn't the idealist you mooted is committed to the future not existing, since everything that exists is perceived, and the future is not yet perceived? — Banno
There could not be two distinct things without separation between them, otherwise they'd be only one thing. And, if there is separation between them, that separation must consist of something. If it's not something real, then we're back to there really being only one thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you misunderstand. It's obviously not "some C" which separates A from B. What is the case is that A is different from, or other than B. C could not make A other than B, because C is of the same type as both A and B, and this is why the infinite regress appears, you have not grasped the need for something of a different type.. What makes A different from B, must be something categorically distinct from both A and B, as well as C, D, E, F, or anything else of that category, because these are all of the same type, and cannot account for the difference within the type. Another thing of the same type cannot account for the differences between things of the same type.
This is why there is a need for dualism, rather than pure idealism, or solipsism. If A and B represent distinct minds, then there must be something which makes A other than, or different from B. This must be something categorically distinct, like "matter" is supposed to be distinct from mind, not another bit of the same substance, C. Or else we would have one continuity of mind, A, B, C, D... with nothing really separating one from the other. — Metaphysician Undercover
what you will do tomorrow does not (yet) exist. It is not either true nor false. — Banno
If idealism is true then we know everything. — Banno
Your extreme idealist must conclude that because it is not part of experience, what you will do tomorrow does not (yet) exist. It is not either true nor false. — Banno
Yet idealism holds as a minimal position that reality is mind-dependent. Reality is of course what is said by true sentences. Hence idealism must hold that the truth of a sentence true is dependent on mind. — Banno
The problem with unenumerated rights is in deciding what they are — Hanover
There are two possibilities : either p exists before being experienced or p exists after (at the moment of) being experienced. If after (i.e., the experiencing mind must be present for existence), then solipsism. — Real Gone Cat
Yes, that is reasonable. The only way we arrive at these unspoken rules (like the right to have an abortion) is through a biblical sort of sensus plenior exegesis upon a fairly limited document. If 100 otherwise uninitiated interpreters were asked if abortion were protected under the US Constitution, I can't imagine anyone would write an opinion remotely close to Roe v. Wade, especially with regard to trimester framework described in it.
But even if I grant you that substantive due process is reasonable, that doesn't negate the reasonableness of those who reject it, but you're instead left with a reasonable disagreement, although few describe the dispute in that way. — Hanover
While the Ninth Amendment – and indeed the entire Bill of Rights – originally concerned restrictions upon federal power, the subsequently enacted Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the States as well from abridging fundamental personal liberties. And, the Ninth Amendment, in indicating that not all such liberties are specifically mentioned in the first eight amendments, is surely relevant in showing the existence of other fundamental personal rights, now protected from state, as well as federal, infringement. In sum, the Ninth Amendment simply lends strong support to the view that the "liberty" protected by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments from infringement by the Federal Government or the States is not restricted to rights specifically mentioned in the first eight amendments. — Griswold v. Connecticut
If there is multiple minds, then isn't it necessary that there is something which separates one mind from another? — Metaphysician Undercover
If it's silent on the point, all the more reason not to use it as a basis for literal interpretation, which is the error Anglo-Saxon lawyers keep making. — Benkei
It seems that mental phenomena belong to minds. If not my mind, then a Hive Mind.
If p comes into existence at the moment of being experienced, it is only part of the mind experiencing it. I.e.,solipsism. — Real Gone Cat
So the uber-mind is indistinguishable from the material world. — Real Gone Cat
Ah, the Hive Mind. — Real Gone Cat
The former is called solipsism. — Real Gone Cat
The latter is a form of materialism that just calls matter by another name. — Real Gone Cat
Of course the future is unknowable. But that is the case for both the realist and the idealist. — Real Gone Cat
If not, then I don't see how you avoid the charge of solipsism — Real Gone Cat
Does p come into being at the moment it is experienced? Or is it lurking in some uber-mind? — Real Gone Cat
An unfortunate reality:
1. Abortion ought be afforded to those women who choose it in certain circumstances.
2. The US Constitution doesn't speak to that right.
You can believe in 1 and 2 at the same time.
That you see the Constitution as a vehicle to justify a progressive morality, regardless of the the actual content of the text, is a political position. I'm not condemning the sentiment and an argument can be made that the harsh rule of law should be bent by those wise enough to see its injustice, but so too can an argument be made that the rule of law ought be followed and not be overturned upon subjective notions if fairness.
That is, the ruling was a reasonable result if one sincerely holds to the position that the Constitution doesn't say whatever we think it ought to say. — Hanover
At the end of the day, most people care more about the economy than ideological issues, especially one like abortion that doesn't really affect that many people — Paulm12
If the 2014 age-specific abortion rates prevail, 24% of women aged 15 to 44 years in that year will have an abortion by age 45 years.
I sincerely hope American empire will implode in my life time of its politics and judiciary continues to be this regressive. — Benkei
For that reason, in future cases, we should reconsider all of this Court's substantive due process precedents, including Griswold, Lawrence, and Obergefell. — Thomas
This is evident in the analogy that the dissent draws between the abortion right and the rights recognized in Griswold (contraception), Eisenstadt (same), Lawrence (sexual conduct with member of the same sex), and Obergefell (same-sex marriage). Perhaps this is designed to stoke unfounded fear that our decision will imperil those other rights... — Alito
It's about Fitch's paradox. — Banno
Only some of what one might say actually works. There is a way in which reality does not care what you say about it. Believe what you will, you cannot walk through walls. — Banno
If it is true in an over-mind, it remains true in a mind. I don't see any accrued advantage in such speculation. — Banno
Then why bother with it? — Banno
Yes. What's wrong with: brain activity is sensations? — bongo fury
is the myth, the internal picture that doesn't happen. — bongo fury
For me, the object we experience and the cause of our sensations is the same thing. This can be observed. So I think it is you who needs to show that there are in fact two different objects, because it isn’t immediately apparent that this is so. — NOS4A2
So do you accept that the fundamental furniture of the Universe is material in nature? Whatever that turns out to be? — Wayfarer
You’ll need to figure out a better argument because you’re still viewing the TV screen directly. — NOS4A2
It does follow that we experience the world directly and that there is a connection between oneself and the object for the same reasons I stated earlier. Real, physical connections, for instance light touching the eyes, hands touching the object etc. occur in these interactions. — NOS4A2
My distinction between direct and indirect pertains to viewing the world. The TV screen, being in the world, is viewed directly, as is anything else in the periphery, like the TV stand. An indirect view would be representationalism, the assumption that we are viewing a representation of a TV. — NOS4A2
I don’t understand. The only direct connection I am speaking of is the viewing of the painting (along with everything else in the periphery), not that there is any connection between a painting of a woman and a woman. The connections and contacts are real, not figurative, for instance light hitting the eyes. — NOS4A2
So, they experience this thing called shape differently. — Bylaw
Can you explain how we can run through a field and no fall down despite the incredibly complicated surface say a cattle field presents? — Bylaw
None of which we experience indirectly. — NOS4A2
All I know is we perceive external world objects. — NOS4A2
Do we not experience mental phenomena then? Because to me it still sounds like you’re saying that instead of a painting you are experiencing mental phenomena, which is an experience. If you’re not experiencing an experience, then how is it you are able to view, observe, see, feel, sense mental phenomena? Upon what do mental phenomena appear and to whom do they appear to? — NOS4A2
I am not sure what Molyneux's problem says about the external to the perceiver existence of shape. They've been blind and have not learned to see shapes, and then they learn. — Bylaw
Which is why it is better to use things like shape and volume for example. — Bylaw
I don’t think we’re brains. So I don’t see how it is possible that an experience is in the head — NOS4A2
We are conscious of the world, not of consciousness. We experience the world, not experience. We perceive the world, not perception. — NOS4A2
All evidence points to there being no such veil between the boundary of the self and the rest of the world. Where the body ends the rest of the world begins. There is nothing between them. The contact is direct. — NOS4A2
We experience the outer world directly rather than indirectly, like through some subjective Cartesian theater. We don’t experience “consciousness” or “subjective experience”; we experience independent things. If we pick up a rock, for example, there is nothing between us and the rock, and therefor nothing prohibiting us from confirming its independence. It seems to me the idealist has yet to prove what this prohibition is. — NOS4A2
We experience the outer world directly rather than indirectly, like through some subjective Cartesian theater. We don’t experience “consciousness” or “subjective experience”; we experience independent things. If we pick up a rock, for example, there is nothing between us and the rock, and therefor nothing prohibiting us from confirming its independence. It seems to me the idealist has yet to prove what this prohibition is. — NOS4A2
The reading bit is about raising the point that perhaps distinctions such as direct, indirect, internal, external, subjective, objective, realist and idealist are inadequate to the task set in the OP. Perhaps they misdirect us. — Banno
