I suppose sensation is being as opposed to not being. Without sensation, there is nothing, which is inconceivable to the conscious mind. Stop moving completely for a moment, stop thinking, do not attempt to rationalize anything and just be still. Your state of being at that time will be the only thing in existence from your perspective, to assume that anything else is existing will require faith. I guess I can't give you a concrete answer because you are still presupposing that you are experiencing a "thing." Why does this have to be so? When you tear down the labels and rationalizations behind everything you'll find there is no longer any point of reference, and no coherency. You are left with nothing but the sensation of your own isolated perception, with no clear source or meaning in sight.
I get that everyone is trying to say to me that other people exist, but how do you know? How does anyone know? — Darkneos
I totally agree with you here. Unfortunately, when strict logic and one's individual, immediate perception suggest something, it moves out of the realm of "ad ignoratiam" as you put it.
Solipsism dose not take into account the relational nature of existence, it makes no comment on this issue whatsoever. Nothing can exist relative to itself. A human being is born. A human being is a living organism, that has evolved in the biosphere, so it has evolved relative to the biosphere. A human organism must exchange gases, heat, take in water, food, excrete entropy, etc, as well as interpret sensory data from the information surrounding them. Note you have evolved various senses to interpret sensory data relating to the information external to you. Sorry to put it this way, but you are a system evolved to interact with an external world, and other people. — Pop
First there is the notion that all that exists is your mind. This might encompass an experience.
If if encompasses an experience then nothing disproves solipsism.
Since each consciousness only has access to its own consciousness, it has no way of proving that any other consciousness exists.
A thing being logically sound =/= that thing being true. In fact since the idea that the world is as it seems is logically sound, that argument is self defeating.
If you want to throw around philosophical razors and logical gizmos, Occam’s razor is the idea that the simpler more mundane explanation is more often the correct one. So we have a) the world is as it presents itself, or b) everything is a lie and you are the only real thing in this world. Occam’s razor is really firmly against solipsism. However, just as something being logical does not necessitate its truth, Occam’s razor does not dictate truth either.
I’d also point out while we are on the subject of Razors that Newton’s Flaming Laser Sword (for an idea to be worth discussing as a true possibility it must have demonstrable consequences), Hitchen’s razor (he who makes the claim must provide proof, a claim without proof requires no evidence to dismiss), and Sagan’s Standard (extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence) are all also firmly against solipsism.
I can cheer you up. — bongo fury
it's unproveable and unrefutable — Darkneos
And why can't a solipsist be a realist? after all, the thought that the external world has independent existence is just a thought, and solipsists accept the existence of thoughts. — sime
Because — khaled
I think of some concepts parallel to solipsism: epistemic egoism, epistemic narcissism, epistemic authoritarianism.And why can't a solipsist be a realist? after all, the thought that the external world has independent existence is just a thought, and solipsists accept the existence of thoughts.
— sime
I just don't know what to say... — Banno
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