Actually, sometimes it is possible to experience people as a mind if you develop the sensitivity for it. In this way, you can catch what they're thinking before they even say it. But it takes a bit to build such a connection.Are our minds touching when I read your words on this screen? How is that different than being in each other's presence? I can experience you as words on a screen, or as a body, or as a voice on the phone, but never as a mind. — Harry Hindu
We never experience other minds, only other bodies. You learn to predict other people's behavior that you know well.Actually, sometimes it is possible to experience people as a mind if you develop the sensitivity for it. In this way, you can catch what they're thinking before they even say it. But it takes a bit to build such a connection. — Agustino
So then what is the difference between materialism and idealism? Why choose one over the other? — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that you are saying that we aren't disagreeing on which meat we are chewing on, rather we are chewing on the same meat and we are merely disagreeing on the name of the meat we are chewing on.
Nope, that's not what I said. And you just repeated what you previously said, so you're clearly talking past what I'm saying.We never experience other minds, only other bodies. You learn to predict other people's behavior that you know well. — Harry Hindu
And the idealist can say the same. — Michael
An idealist can say it, but I've not seen it backed up. What is that connects the ideas in my mind of your behavior to your actual behavior, which I suppose are ideas in your mind?
BIV A has experiences of having a body, BIV B has experiences of interacting with other bodies.
But how does B justify interacting with A? — Marchesk
I don't understand why you think bodies being of substance A can avoid solipsism but bodies being of substance B can't. — Michael
Those questions can be asked of the materialist as well. — Michael
The imaginary vs real distinction doesn't relate to the question of Idealism vs Materialism. Both Idealists and Materialists make the imaginary vs real distinction. — andrewk
The imaginary is understood as something perceivable only by the mind imagining it, whereas the real is something perceivable by multiple minds or even something not perceivable by any mind. — Janus
To then affirm that in the movie Inception the other agencies were not “real” is then, I argue, a fallacy of reasoning (given the very metaphysical premises of the movie). Either you envision a body that is asleep/unconscious/etc. from which is produced multiple interacting agencies, or, else no such body and there being nothing but a communally shared dream between a multitude of agencies (as to the movie’s depiction of recurring personas, this in a way is no different than Shakespeare’s comments that all we are are actors/agencies/roles on a stage … playing out our roles on the sage of life (or at least something to the like)). — javra
But there's no way for him to be sure. — Marchesk
I would say that, for an idealist, an event is imaginary if it was invented and narrated by somebody that had no good reason to suppose that it ever happened.How would you say idealists make sense of the distinction between real and imaginary? — Janus
What does it matter!? This running about for absolute certainty is a running after the horizon in belief that one can eventually hold it in one's hands. — javra
We can't be certain, but we can strive for reasonable beliefs. I'm arguing that idealism is less reasonable than materialism when it comes to other minds, because materialists have a plausible account of interaction via bodies that idealists lack. — Marchesk
because if you're arguing for materialism then the mind is a physical thing, and so there shouldn't be a problem with saying that minds can interact with each other without any intermediary. — Michael
This is what an idealist needs to do. Show how mind A can know about mind B via ideas in mind A. — Marchesk
And the materialist has to show how mind A can know about body B via ideas in mind A. — Michael
I fail to see how that's more parsimonious than saying that ideas in mind A are caused by interacting with mind B. — Michael
This is what an idealist needs to do. Show how mind A can know about mind B via ideas in mind A. — Marchesk
Ideas, as in thoughts? — javra
Ideas as in perception, not concepts. That's the sense-data theory of perception that Locke, Hume, Berkeley and others have championed. And it does bring up the specter of skepticism regarding other minds. — Marchesk
We never experience other minds, only other bodies. You learn to predict other people's behavior that you know well. — Harry Hindu
Nope, that's not what I said. And you just repeated what you previously said, so you're clearly talking past what I'm saying. — Agustino
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.