greed; subjective idealism went out with continental German idealism, which advocated a necessary external material reality. — Mww
I don't know that reality is properly material, or even completely physical. It's something with those sorts of properties and relations, but it's not anything like what we get in everyday experience. Maybe its quantum fields with a touch of proto-consciousness or it's mathematical structures all the way down. I don't know. But it's something very far removed from our human experience. Or at least the fundamental (ontological) reality making everything up is.
I guess that means Kant was kind of right. As were the ancient Greek metaphysicians in the sense that reality had to be something counter-intuitive, even if they were mostly wrong about the actual ontology, with some exception for the atomists and Heraclitus. — Marchesk
.You need to read more Wittgenstein.
Whatever it is, let's not throw ordinary language philosophy out with the rubbish. — S
So what does that entail? My problem with ordinary language philosophy is that it seems to stick it'\s head in the sand regarding the difficult metaphysical and epistemological problems. We know from science that reality can't be simply what we experience. Ancient philosophers knew that as well. — Marchesk
You keep getting point number three wrong, by the way, in spite of my corrections. — S
3. S. then said that that term has a meaning, though he’s either unable or unwilling to say what it is. — Michael Ossipoff
Why then do you appear to find such a simple point so complicated that you cannot understand it? — S
Do you remember the short version of the explanation I gave as to why my unwillingness or inability to do so is unimportant? — S
Whether I can or can't, defining it isn't necessary if we understand the meaning, which we do.
If it weren't for the involvement of those such as yourself and Janus, I would feel much more like I am in a madhouse! :lol: — S
Ok, no prob. It is true there are apt to be rocks in the future. No different in principle than believing there will be rocks in the future. No different in principle than having no reason to think there wouldn’t be rocks in the future, all else being equal. None of those are congruent with the truth statement in the OP. And, truth-apt statements can be false, which means the statement there are no rocks when all the humans are gone is truth-apt. — Mww
But post-human rocks are not simple and easily understandable if you actually think about it. — Echarmion
This is a bit like saying quantum physics "fails" because it goes to great lengths to explain away such simple and easily understandable concepts as discrete objects, or measurements that don't affect that which is measured. — Echarmion
Expain to me how this is not just an argument from ignorance? — Echarmion
Until I have access to new evidence, I will just assume that "post-human" is rather similar to "pre-human". That's what happens when I actually think about it. I can also invent all sorts of hypothetical possibilities (like "maybe this is all just in my mind"), but actually "thinking" leads me to be agnostic toward those claims. — ZhouBoTong
Quantum physics has led to stuff. It has some predictive and explanatory power. Can you give concrete examples of the "gains" of Idealism? See, I would not say quantum physics "fails" because it has "succeeded" in some areas. Aside from sounding good (or bad) in our minds, what has Idealism contributed? By the way, if you can point to hard gains of Idealism, you will be going a long way toward convincing me your position has merit. — ZhouBoTong
I had to think about this quite a while, as I am sure I am somewhat ignorant of idealism. I think if you can explain how it is (an argument from ignorance), then that will help. What information do I not know? Like I said, I know of NO "gains" of Idealism. I certainly CANNOT disprove Idealism, but I can't disprove god either. Is there a hypothesis that would allow us to test whether idealism is real? Maybe that pixelated universe thing is a related experiment (although that seems FAR more specific than general idealism)? — ZhouBoTong
Whether I can or can't, defining it isn't necessary if we understand the meaning, which we do.
Are you saying if it was phrased this way:
"There is a rock, but no one is there to perceive it, because we all died an hour previously.
Do you think there is a rock? Yes or no?"
Then it is totally fine? — ZhouBoTong
But post-human rocks are not simple and easily understandable if you actually think about it. — Echarmion
But this means that, unlike S, I accept that idealism is at least coherent. — Echarmion
That there were rocks in the past is not an effective argument against idealism, because we only conclude that rocks existed in the past based on observing them in the present. But if we don't know whether present rocks are real, our conclusion about the past isn't warranted, either. — Echarmion
I was specifically responding to S' post, in which he maintained that idealism wasn't intuitive to him and therefore wrong. — Echarmion
The world is a picture in our minds. This much I think, is hard to argue with. — Echarmion
Can you give concrete examples of the "gains" of Idealism? — ZhouBoTong
Rocks are rocks. They are as defined in English. It's not the rocks that change, it's just the status of our existence that changes: as in, we do or we don't. — S
We know that there are rocks in space that we've never even seen, or felt, or tasted, and suchlike. There were rocks before us, there are rocks now, and there would be rocks after us. — S
You view me as someone who is trying to burst your bubble. — S
I don't think that this is the first time in this discussion that someone has falsely claimed that of me. That is, if you mean something like logically possible. I don't like the term "coherent". It's ambiguous. — S
It's absurd to deny that present rocks are real. It's either genuinely absurd, in the logical sense, or absurd as a deviation from ordinary language use. — S
No, it's definitely not. You can come up with clever arguments, sure. You can make it all internally consistent, sure. But if you have a false premise, then your argument is fucked from the start! — S
Wow. That's a gross oversimplification which misrepresents my argument, otherwise known as a straw man.
This is always a massive problem in a debate. If someone sees my argument like that, then it is much more understandable why they reject it, or at least they think they do. Of course, it's not actually my argument that they're rejecting. — S
It means that whatever it is, or whatever the science says it is, that doesn't mean that we have to start talking funny. — S
That there were rocks in the past is not an effective argument against idealism — Echarmion
But this means that, unlike S, I accept that idealism is at least coherent. — Echarmion
This is especially true with regards to Quantum mechanics, which has given rise to a bunch of bad metaphysics trying to square it's findings with a naive realism. — Echarmion
The core of idealism is that at the core of everything we know are our thoughts. — Echarmion
Before I had studied Zen for thirty years, I saw mountains as mountains, and rivers as rivers. When I arrived at a more intimate knowledge, I came to the point where I saw that mountains are not mountains, and rivers are not rivers. But now that I have got its very substance I am at rest. For it's just that I see mountains once again as mountains, and rivers once again as river. — Qingyuan Weixin
“There is a rock”, is not susceptible to falsification. — Mww
Great care is advised here, because there are many disciplines listed under Idealism as a philosophical domain, just as there is in Realism. — Mww
And what came after was a paradigm shift, the single greatest such shift in history, with respect to philosophy in general and epistemology in particular. — Mww
The new way says the image “star” belongs to the mind alone, hence the mind is responsible for everything having to do with “star”, meaning we tell ourselves how it is to be known by us. — Mww
There’s also the aspect of the new Idealism in the reinstatement of a priori knowledge as being both real and substantial, whereas classically, and even mid-Enlightenment, a priori knowledge was generally either disavowed or at least misunderstood. Like, everybody knew mathematics was always true but nobody knew how it could always be true, what made it always true, with respect to human cognition. It wasn’t the instance of “ideas” in the mind for rememberance of things not in immediate attention, but a very real kind of actual knowledge by means of which intuitions based on extant experience are brought forth. — Mww
The power of the mind began to overshadow the power of the Establishment. — Mww
Rocks, as defined by the English language, are a bunch of human observations. So the status of the observer is relevant. But I know you disagree with that. — Echarmion
All of these are conclusion we have drawn based on observations. So it's true that, in the world we observe, rocks exist independently of any specific observer. It just doesn't follow that they exist independently of observation, period. — Echarmion
I do like the term "coherent" though. Since your position is that idealism is absurd on the face of it and a deviation from ordinary language, I think "coregent" with it's connotation of something being incomprehensible as language, is apt. But I know you refuse to let anyone summarize your position. — Echarmion
Didn't you just say it's logically possible? Anyways I don't accept that "absurd as a deviation from ordinary language use" is a relevant criticism. — Echarmion
You could show us how the premise is false. But you won't, will you? — Echarmion
One wonders why everyone misunderstands you. — Echarmion
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