There is no such thing as an illusion of the soul.
— creativesoul
And presumably there's no such thing as an illusion of a ghost? Yet people claim to have seen and believe in ghosts. So at the very least you must accept that believing in something and believing to have seen something is not the same thing as there being the illusion of that thing. — Michael
In which case the simple response is that there isn't an external world and so isn't the illusion of an external world, even though people believe in and believe to see an external world.
I'm not following your logic to reach the conclusions you have — creativesoul
But as the example of ghosts shows us, it's not enough that people claim to see or believe in an external world to conclude that there is at least the illusion of one. — Michael
I'm not clear on why you would say that. — Janus
It seems that if people claim to see or believe in an external world, that qualifies as there being an illusion of an external world, just in case there is no independently existent (that is apart from the seeing and believing) external world. If there were an independently existent external world then the seeing of and believing in an external world would not be an illusion. — Janus
I think in the case of a brain-in-a-vat type scenario we can say that there is an external world but also that the world we experience is just an illusion of an external world. — Michael
They weren't conclusions. They were the skeptic's response to your claim "if there is such thing as an illusion of an external world, then there is an external world." This conditional isn't helpful unless it can be shown that there really is an illusion of an external world. But as the example of ghosts shows us, it's not enough that people claim to see or believe in an external world to conclude that there is at least the illusion of one. — Michael
Claiming to see and/or believe in X doesn't warrant our belief in X. — creativesoul
I'm not clear on why you would say that. It seems that if people claim to see or believe in an external world, that qualifies as there being an illusion of an external world, just in case there is no independently existent (that is apart from the seeing and believing) external world. — Janus
The only sensible coherent use of "illusion" presupposes that an illusion of X is not X. — creativesoul
If it is the case that all thought and belief are existentially dependent upon a plurality... — creativesoul
Which of the two outlined arguments above would you like to discuss? — creativesoul
I do happen to hold to an attitude rather like Kantian idealism, in this sense - that what we call “the world” isn’t something wholly outside ourselves, something we experience in a completely detached and objective way. It’s something that is created moment by moment in our minds, by piecing together the jumble of unconnected glimpses our senses give us—and we do the 'piecing together' according to a plan that’s partly given us by our biology, partly given us by our culture, and partly a function of our individual life experience. But attempting to understand that process of 'putting together' is very difficult because the very effort of understanding it is also part of that process. That's the sense in which we can't get 'outside it'. — Wayfarer
Heidegger replies to the effect that the scandal is not so much that philosophy fails to prove the existence of the external world as that such proofs are expected and attempted over and over and over again. — Janus
For me the scandal/absurdity is just that arguing/proving already assumes an other to be convinced. — macrosoft
You need to go back to the texts and reconsider Kant’s remark about ‘the scandal of philosophy’. All you’re doing is begging the question, which means, assuming what needs to be proven. You’re simply stating that the reality of the external world is apodictic and then wondering why others aren’t agreeing with you. There’s nothing else at issue here. — Wayfarer
If it is the case that all thought and belief are existentially dependent upon a plurality...
— creativesoul
I asked before and I don’t think you explained, but what does it mean to be “existentially dependent” on something? — Michael
While we can't compare the object itself with our cognition of the object... — macrosoft
When the existence of a thing requires the existence of an other thing. — creativesoul
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.