But as Gilbert Ryle once argued: all of something can't be counterfeit, for then there is nothing left it could be counterfeit of. Seems fairly incontrovertible to me.. . you cannot state as incontrovertible fact that it is any more than you can prove that we're not all just a figment of God's imagination. — Barry Etheridge
But, the problem for me is so do my dreams. — saw038
The life that feels real to you feels real because it is the reality of life that you feel. The dream that feels real to you feels real because it is the reality of your memories and empathy that you feel, which makes it different.. . life . . sure feels real! But, the problem for me is so do my dreams. — saw038
Only under your false assumption that the child would never see the real environment. In the arguments from illusion and hallucination representational perception is assumed, which makes them bad when used against arguments in which representational perception is not assumed.Nothing in the child's whole environment would be real though, of course, entirely real to the child. — Barry Etheridge
Sure, but that was not asked in this thread. All can't be a dream, for then there would be nothing left to dream of.In any event Ryle's argument need not apply at all in the case of the dreamworld for it is not necessary to even posit that it is a counterfeit of anything. — Barry Etheridge
This doesn't seem like a good argument, since the fact that two words come to mean opposite things from use doesn't mean that we can't have been mistaken in thinking that more than one side of the dichotomy ever applied. We thought the difference was apparent in our experience, but we were wrong; we were always dreaming, and never 'conscious' in the relevant way we thought we were. The distinction in retrospect would merely have been two sorts of dreaming, and there is nothing unintelligible or unimaginable about this.
We thought the difference was apparent in our experience, but we were wrong; we were always dreaming, and never 'conscious' in the relevant way we thought we were.
What we know about being awake or asleep, conscious or dreaming is based on our personal experience of these states of being which is then used to demolish what was learned in experience, which yes makes sense logically, but its not how we experience life. I can understand and accept that sun neither rises nor sets, but asserting the same sort of reality to my nightmares, misses something about reality and what it misses, I think, has to do with the language we use. — Cavacava
it is why a movie like the Matrix makes sense to a popular audience. — The Great Whatever
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