It’s just speculative philosophy after all, which means it’s being correct is not a consideration, whereas it’s usefulness might be. — Mww
We assume that there is appearances in one hand and in the other hand there is objective medium sourcing these appearances..but what are this so called objective medium but another appearance!.
Notice that what you got in reality is this phenomenal field of sensory perception. You are claiming that there's is stuff behined the scenes like the brain or the atoms ..but what are those but more of the same phenomenal field . Consciousness is not happening inside the brain..the brain is occurring within Consciousness. Phenomenon is not made out of atoms..atoms are phenomenon themselves. You have nothing but subjective appearances..that's the only thing that there is. There is no ultimate ground ..every ground must be grounded in something else forever =endless regress of appearances. This is why "dreams" are the perfect analogy for reality. Appearances with no ground. — Nobody
Properties of the tabletop
1. Is not coloured, but rather reflects light of particular wavelengths
2. Size is fixed
3. Shape is fixed
4. Is discrete not continuous, because made of molecules. — Herg
Example: if you hold an orange ..the colour..the smell..the touching is your perception which is your direct experience of a perceived object. The actual object is not any of these perceptions..it is the stuff behind the scenes which is sourcing these appearances . But of course there is no such thing as there is not a shred of evidence for an objective world. — Nobody
In conscious awareness, that which appears are intuitions representing sensory impressions. — Mww
What is the ultimate ground of reality?! — Nobody
Your dreams are something in a sense that they are appearances. But they came from nothing... — Nobody
Two reasons: ego and intelligence. The first for thinking I might actually understand something so incredibly convoluted, and the second for thinking it actually makes sense to me.
It’s just speculative philosophy after all, which means it’s being correct is not a consideration, whereas it’s usefulness might be. — Mww
This is a category mistake. You are confusing the stuff behind the scenes with our sensory experience of the stuff behind the scenes. — Herg
Properties of the appearance of the tabletop
1. Coloured brown
2. Size alters if we move away from or towards the table
3. Shape alters as we change the angle from which we view the table
4. Is continuous, i.e. not made up of discrete parts
Properties of the tabletop
1. Is not coloured, but rather reflects light of particular wavelengths
2. Size is fixed
3. Shape is fixed
4. Is discrete not continuous, because made of molecules.
It is evident that the corresponding properties in each list are mutually exclusive. That shows that the objects of which they are properties cannot be the same object, i.e. the appearance of the tabletop cannot be the same thing as the tabletop. Thus an appearance of a thing is not the same as the thing itself. Nor is the thing itself merely another appearance, as you suggest, because if it were, it would have properties of the sort we find in the first list, rather than, as it actually does, properties of the kind in the second list. Appearances have the sort of properties in my first list; the objects of which they are appearances have the sort of properties in the second. To take your own examples, brains and atoms have properties of the sort in my second list, and therefore are objects, not appearances.
In fact the tabletop is a hypothesised external object. The hypothesis (that there is an externally existing tabletop with the properties in the second list) is a good one, because when coupled with the fact that we experience appearances, it explains why the appearances have the properties in the first list. Without the objective existence of the tabletop, there would be no explanation for the appearance having these properties, i.e. there would be no explanation for our sensory experience being the way it is. This, of course, is the flaw in idealism; by removing the objective world, it removes the most plausible explanation for our experience being as it is.
I hope this is helpful. — Herg
There is direct experience of a lot of different things, including objective things. So that would suggest the opposite of your conclusion. — Terrapin Station
there indeed were flaws in most forms of subjective or absolute or immaterial idealism, — Mww
This is a category mistake. You are confusing the stuff behind the scenes with our sensory experience of the stuff behind the scenes. — Herg
As I've been pointing out, the words "exist", "there is...", and "real", are rarely used non-contextually — S
, and they don't need to be defined in order to be understood. This is self-evident, so doesn't need an argument.
Fine. I'm talking about when they are so used. ...as when people in this thread say that this physical world is objectively existent. — Michael Ossipoff
We've been over (and over and over) that, in your previous thread that was closed. — Michael Ossipoff
What’s a po’ boy to do, huh? — Mww
Well, he could try telling us what he means by "Exist", "There is..." or "Real", when he uses those terms with (supposed) absolute, objective, context-less, unqualified meaning. — Michael Ossipoff
He must define that term as well. Because I pretend not to understand what he says when he uses the word. — S
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