How do you know that the Idealist reality operates by "straight forward logic"? — tom
How do we know that any kind of reality operates by logic? Does the question even make sense? It's language that operates by logic, and I see no reason to believe that the rules of semantic derivation depend on the ontological nature of things. — Michael
So, Idealist reality obeys the laws of physics. Thus Idealism and physicalism are identical except Idealism applies the label to everything in Reality "not objectively real"?
Under Idealism, how are these laws discovered? — tom
Who said anything about the laws of physics? We were talking about logic; about what statements do or do not follow from others. — Michael
The exact same rules that we currently use. — Michael
Which has nothing to do with Idealism? — tom
Anyway, I asked what rules Idealist reality follows, and you seemed to reply,
Which, as far as I'm aware are the laws of physics. i.e. Reality obeys the laws of physics. So, how is idealism different from (Physicalism + Label)?
Logic is the same whether idealism or not-idealism is the case. — Michael
Why don't proofs with an infinite number of steps work under idealism, or the square root of "not" allowed as a logical operator? — tom
Given that you and Harry are saying that idealism logically entails solipsism, that's exactly what you're claiming. — Michael
Gee, it's surprising that you'd believe that you know what I'm claiming better than I do. — Terrapin Station
Because, according to the idealist, these proofs don't work, such a square root isn't allowed, and idealism is the case.
How would the non-idealist address the same question? — Michael
Under physicalism, the square root of NOT is allowed, which is a good thing, since that particular logical operator exists in REALITY. — tom
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