Maybe the physicalist is humbly asking how opposites interact? If the dualist is going to use terms that are opposites to describe the world, then it is incumbent upon them to explain how they interact. The monist - whether they are a physicalist, idealist, or something else (like me) - doesn't have that problem because they are not using opposite terms to describe the world.Well, in my humble opinion, the question has its roots in the perceived difficulty in coming to terms with material-immaterial interaction but that's just another way of saying that the two don't/shouldn't interact and that's physicalism in disguise.
If one is a non-physicalist, there's the material body and the immaterial mind, and going by how things are, they do interact. How else does everybody get around?
I maybe a mile off the mark but that's how I fee. — TheMadFool
Maybe the physicalist is humbly asking how opposites interact? — Harry Hindu
The OP is basically asking how opposites interact. Well MU, how do opposites interact? — Harry Hindu
Which is the same as saying that pattern and the substance are one and the same as you can never have one without the other - ontologically. The distinction you are talking about only exists in your mind as language concepts. — Harry Hindu
I am now wondering if part of the problem is that dualists seem to think that they see the world as it is (naive realists), and how it appears is different than how it is thought about - hence dualism. You think that the duality exists ontologically, and are unwilling to ponder the possibility that the way it appears in the mind may be different than how it actually is (but that isn't necessarily saying that we can never know about how it actually is). — Harry Hindu
Pay attention to the bolded part: This can be said about earth, water, fire and air, so why dualism? Your focus on mind and body being special and fundamental would simply be a personal fetish with the two. — Harry Hindu
You're assuming that there can't be different kinds of one "substance" (again, you haven't even explained what you mean by the word, or what qualifies as a "substance", so until you do, I'm assuming that you don't know what you're actually talking about when you use that word). Just as we have all the different elements that are just different configurations of atoms, we can have different configurations of one "substance". There are different configurations of the same "substance" between the configurations that are our minds. — Harry Hindu
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