You are your own flag/property. As to those that are external to you and public, indeed they are shared by everyone. If you mean that only you have the view of the world that is yours, i agree. It appears to me you've turned the idea of perception somewhat inside-out.Therefore, there needs to be a flag or property in the world which contains the information needed to tell which perspective my life becomes. — bizso09
However, from another person’s point of view, this flag points to them, not me. This is impossible, since this is a universal flag. Hence, I am the only perspective there is. — bizso09
If we assume, each person has their own world, with their own flags that points to them, then there needs to be another flag outside of this, which tells which world I will be in for the life I’m living now. — bizso09
You may be making some conceptual mistakes, but then again there might be something buried deep in what you are saying. If I try to generate something resembling a deductively valid argument from what you are saying, the first draft I get is:there needs to be a flag or property in the world which contains the information needed to tell which perspective my life becomes
If this is what you are getting at then premise 2 requires a lot of supporting argument. — jkg20
If Jimmy has their view of the world, and Mike has their view of the world, then how do I tell if I am Jimmy or Mike? You might say I know who I am, but actually I don't unless the "mineness" is stored somewhere.If you mean that only you have the view of the world that is yours, i agree. — tim wood
If you are observer nr. 587, there might be a flag nr. 587 attached to the things that you experience. Another person might experience the things with flag nr. 935 etc. — Echarmion
You are right that "you" has zero content, but actually "you" encodes the "angle of observation" or the "point of view". So it does have something.This doesn't make much sense since the "you" would have zero content associated with it. — Echarmion
But you are arguing for a position that there are not two such perspectives, aren't you?Because I can tell the difference between my perspective and yours
Sorry, you are right. I'm saying we have two subjective experiences (not perspectives), so the single perspective tells me which one is going to be mine. In my original argument, perspective is the flagBut you are arguing for a position that there are not two such perspectives, aren't you? — jkg20
This seems tautologous because it can't be falsified so I suspect it may be a proof without meaning. — Zophie
How do I know I'm observer nr 587, and not nr 935? Where does that information come from? — bizso09
You are right that "you" has zero content, but actually "you" encodes the "angle of observation" or the "point of view". So it does have something. — bizso09
Not sure how this gets around the problem. Remember you are trying to prove the premise of your argument, or at least my version of your argument, that mineness is a genuine feature of things in the world. Your argument that it must be is now that without mineness you could not distinguish between a subjective experience which is yours and a subjective experience which is not yours. But if there is only one subject of experience, which is what you are saying your argument proves, then there is no such distinction to make, so you cannot rest an argument for the existence of mineness on that distiction.I'm saying we have two subjective experiences
This is a peculiar use of language. A camera might be placed to give a specific perspective on a scene, but that does not entail that the camera is a perspective. If you are trying to illuminate a special techical sense of "perspective" by way of the analogy of a film camera, then I think you are digging your own grave: you can have several cameras recording a single scene in a film from a number of different perspectives. This would seem to imply, contrary to what you want to prove, that the idea of there being multiple perspectives makes perfect sense.For example, imagine you're watching a movie. The perspective would be the camera.
There is no such thing as "you" to which the category of "knowing" could apply in this scenario — Echarmion
There can be multiple subjective experiences, what I'm claiming is that there is a single "first person point of view". It is impossible to observe the world through a neutral point of view, like a scientist looking at a closed experiment from outside of that system. There is nothing outside of the world, therefore, the observer is always part of the world being observed. The angle of the first person observer has to be encoded somewhere. If you are the scientist looking at a box of mice, then you are one of the mice, but you gotta know which one.But if there is only one subject of experience — jkg20
In the analogy, the perspective is from the viewer who watches the movie. Whichever camera is shown on screen, has the "first person point of view". Likewise, in the book analogy, the perspective comes from the narrator.A camera might be placed to give a specific perspective on a scene, — jkg20
Therefore, there needs to be a flag or property in the world which contains the information needed to tell which perspective my life becomes. In particular, who is me. However, from another person’s point of view, this flag points to them, not me. This is impossible, since this is a universal flag. Hence, I am the only perspective there is. — bizso09
The universe can be completely identical in every way, except for the "you". — bizso09
Let's assume you know the following: A, B and C exist. In scenario 1, you are A, in scenario 2, you are B, in scenario 3, you do not exist. Between the three scenarios, there's absolutely no difference in the world, apart from the "you". — bizso09
The person you are now, could think, act, live and experience the world exactly the same way with or without "you" being there to observe it. — bizso09
Or look at your friend, they think, act, live and experience the world, but "you" do not observe any of that. — bizso09
Why is it that when you say "I" you mean person A and not person C. — bizso09
If you were to ask person A and C if they are them, they will both say yes. But only "you" know which one of them is indeed you, because the "you" is assigned to person A. The first person perspective goes with A, not C. — bizso09
Only if the "you" isn't part of the universe — Echarmion
If we assume that there is an "objective universe" that exists irrespective of any perspective, then "you" must also be in some way part of that — Echarmion
The world where I am A is different from the world where I am B. — Echarmion
Without me, there wouldn't be a person, there would be no experience, and while there would still be a world in some sense, — Echarmion
My perspective is an integral part of me. It's fundamentally who I am. — Echarmion
They experience their world, not the world. — Echarmion
Because that's what the word means? — Echarmion
On the other hand, you have no way of knowing whether I am just a single person replying to you or some kind of committee. — Echarmion
I'm sorry, but there's no way to refute Solipsism. — h060tu
By person, do you mean the limbs, the body, the thought, the mind or the perspective? When you build up a person step by step, at one point you gotta add the "you". — bizso09
The contradiction in your argument comes from the fact that you regard the world as a collection of distinct entities, and while doing so, you assume the viewpoint of an outsider observer. — bizso09
You say A is A, B is B, C is C, it's all self evident, they are part of the topology of the universe, they are their own flags. But this is incomplete because the world does not just consist of A, B and C but also an additional observer that is making the statement about A, B and C. You cannot ignore the observer. — bizso09
Fundamentally, things must exist in relation to a specific reference point or observer. They cannot exist without a reference point. When something exists, it must exist in relation to something. That something is called "the first person perspective". This must be unique because there is a single way for things to either exist or not exist. — bizso09
When you mistakenly introduce other perspectives, then again you talk about a collection of entities, so those entities must again exist in relation to some reference point. Basically, when I say there is a reference point, I'm making the statement that "things exist". These two statements are equivalent. — bizso09
If you try to derive this argument from your perspective, you will arrive at the conclusion that that reference point for things to exist is in fact "your reference point". Every person can do this. However, we've seen that there is only one such reference point. Hence, there is a contradiction, because you cannot have multiple worlds out there with multiple reference points, when there is a single way for everything to exist or not. It's a binary choice. — bizso09
The reason the reference point resides in me, is because I know I exist here and I observe. — bizso09
I'd be interested to hear how we could conceptualise an metaphysically objective world without assuming the viewpoint of a hypothetical outside observer. — Echarmion
Of course to imagine any kind of world, I have to imagine myself observing it. But that's a crutch my imagination needs — Echarmion
Your argument would also lead to an infinite recursion of observers — Echarmion
By your own logic, entities either enter into a relation to an observer, in which case they exist, or they don't — Echarmion
But crucially there are entities that don't exist but still have properties. — Echarmion
then the same entity can be in different relations with different observers — Echarmion
But you don't exist, according to your own definition. — Echarmion
It is not possible. In the previous example about A,B,C, you'd be ignoring the observer, "yourself", typing out your reply on this forum. But in fact, I'd be ignoring myself observing your typing. The ultimate observer in this chain is me right now watching myself type on my laptop. If we're talking about the world, then we have to include this. We cannot conceptualise it away. — bizso09
It's not just a crutch of imagination, it's a fundamental part of reality we live in. — bizso09
That's correct, but you can show that no matter how many recursions you do, you will always end up with a single ultimate observer. — bizso09
The observer and existence itself are the same thing. If something exists, then it is observed by the reference point. If something does not exist, it is not observed. — bizso09
What is a thing that does not exist but has property? — bizso09
If we're talking about the world that is everything, then that includes that. There is nothing outside of it. — bizso09
Existence is a binary thing. Either something is included in "everything" or it's not. There is no "something" outside of everything. You cannot have multiple existences because by definition the world would expand to include it all. — bizso09
I'd go so far as to say that existence is in fact "unary" because if something does not exist, you cannot make any statements about it. For example, when you talk about dead people, you're talking about things that exist in the universe at a particular point of time, or the memories of them, but they still exist there. — bizso09
Since the observer is existence itself, and we're typing on our laptops right now, we can conclude that there is existence and hence there is an observer. — bizso09
So the question remains, where is this unique observer or reference point? Well, it's where the first person perspective resides. — bizso09
If I ask you the question, do you have first person perspective, my answer would be "no", because you have a third person perspective. If I ask myself, do I have first person perspective, then the answer is "yes". Hence, I know the observer is me. There is absolutely no contradiction for me. The contradiction arises because you claim you also have a "first person perspective" — bizso09
But by definition in any reality, there is one first person perspective, not multiple. — bizso09
If you don't want to believe this, because you think you are an observer, that's fine. But in that case, you must believe that I am not a real observer, and you are the only one. Do you believe that? The fact that I have proof known to me about me being an observer would be irrelevant for you. In particular, you cannot come to the conclusion that you are not the only observer. — bizso09
↪Banno ↪A Seagull
Since he apparently is directing his question to himself...
...I wonder why he does not have an answer? — Frank Apisa
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