They way you know is to define these terms (subjective and objective) clearly. What is subjective without the objective? — Harry Hindu
Quite a few philosophically minded folk would love to do away with the subjective/objective distinction. It does cause quite a few headaches (which may or may not be objective, see following debate).
The idealist side would vote for everything being subjective, or intersubjective. But there is the realist/materialist side that might vote the opposite.
So can everything be considered objective? That would include perceptions (see direct realism), thoughts (brain scans?), dreams (coming to seem to remember?), bodily feels (empirically measurable?), qualia (incoherent?), beliefs/desires (eliminable?), perspectives (God's eye view?), etc. Can we really do away with the subject/object distinction? — Marchesky
don't think idealism does say that. What I think a Kantian idealism says, — Wayfarer
So it has an unavoidably subjective element; the illusion of materialism is that you can see the world, as if there were nobody in it, as if the subject has been bracketed out altogether (cf Nagel's 'view from nowhere'). But that conception is still a human conception, albeit one in which the quantifiable elements are fixed according to theory, and so which is inter-subjective, not merely or simply subjective. — Wayfarer
Quite a few philosophically minded folk would love to do away with the subjective/objective distinction. — Marchesk
The problems arise, I think, when either that ordinary distinction is disputed (e.g., radical skepticism, subjectivism), or when it is applied to something other than judgements (e.g., dualistic phenomena, worlds, viewpoints). — Andrew M
The way you know is to define these terms (subjective and objective) clearly. What is subjective without the objective? Isn't the subjective a limited and/or skewed view of the objective? If this is the case, then subjective is dependent upon the objective, or is a constituent of the objective.
If this isn't the case, then there is no subjective view and the idealist/solipsist "view" is really an objective reality. — Harry Hindu
Again, we are simply talking about the correct and consistent use of terms.What are dreams without waking? What is inner dialog without dialog others can partake in? What is consciousness without lack of consciousness? What is mind without mind-independent?
You mean like that? I suppose you can turn that around. What is mind-independent without mind (something idealists love to ask realists)? — Marchesk
nce you claim that some thing can exist without it's dependent, it is no longer the same thing. — Harry Hindu
But then along came the discovery of matter-energy equivalence — Wayfarer
Both are categories, and categories are created by the mind. I'm a monist, so I believe that there is only one primary substance and because we already have meanings for "matter" and "mind", then I say we use a different term for the primary substance - say "information". So, mind and matter are both dependent upon information.Which is the dependent, mind or matter? Which can be reduced or explained in terms of the other? — Marchesk
The mechanical brain does not secrete thought "as the liver does bile," as the earlier materialists claimed, nor does it put it out in the form of energy, as the muscle puts out its activity. Information is information, not matter or energy. No materialism which does not admit this can survive at the present day.
The mechanical brain does not secrete thought "as the liver does bile," as the earlier materialists claimed, nor does it put it out in the form of energy, as the muscle puts out its activity.
No one is saying anything like "thoughts are secretions of the brain," and no one is saying anything like "thoughts are energy output of the brain." — Terrapin Station
Wiener is saying that you can't provide an account of information in purely physicalist terms; — Wayfarer
It seems very close to your often-repeated assertion of the identity of experiences and brain-states. — Wayfarer
Actually, the dichotomy between matter and mind isn't the dichotomy I was trying to emphasize. By definition, matter can exist without mind. The same cannot be said about subjectivity. As subjectivity is defined as being a limited and/or skewed view of all there is (the objective, or reality), then subjectivity is dependent upon the existence of an a priori objective reality.It from bit? — Marchesk
No one is saying anything like "thoughts are secretions of the brain," and no one is saying anything like "thoughts are energy output of the brain." — Terrapin Station
It seems very close to your often-repeated assertion of the identity of experiences and brain-states. — Wayfarer
Identity is different than saying that something is a secretion or output of something else. — Terrapin Station
As has been pointed out, identity cannot be as trivial as "x = x", which is true of everything. — Real Gone Cat
I was briefly pursuing the following idea on another thread before the ugly real world interceded and pulled me away : It is not brain states (i.e., particular arrangements of neurons) and consciousness that are identical. Rather it is brain activity and consciousness that are identical. Or more properly, it is a particular subset of brain activity and consciousness which are identical (since there is some brain activity not associated with thought). — Real Gone Cat
or to show the existence of consciousness without brain activity. — Real Gone Cat
[brain] states ARE activity, they are dynamic, they are processes. No static things exist. — Terrapin Station
The reason I emphasize activity over state is that I think "brain state" is usually interpreted to be a snapshot of the brain at a given moment. I do not think your definition of brain-states-as-process is shared by most - and can lead to confusion. When the state of any process is talked about, isn't the implication one of what the process is like at a given moment?
Similarly, I think that to many folks, a static thing is implied when talking about "the brain". (I could be wrong.) — Real Gone Cat
But are either consciousness or the corresponding set-of-brain-activity ever encountered without the other? If not, then by the definition of identity given above, they are identical. It would seem that the only objection to this argument would be to disagree with the given definition of identity, or to show the existence of brain activity without consciousness, or to show the existence of consciousness without brain activity. — Real Gone Cat
First, what does speaking of 'brain states' or 'brain activities' actually bring to the table? What's it saying? . . . So I question whether the term 'brain states' or 'brain activities' really mean anything. — Wayfarer
And how do we make that assertion? When we say 'bachelors are unmarried men', how is it meaningful to say that this is a 'brain state'? Very simple logical relationships, such as the law of identity, or the law of the excluded middle, are required to make any statements at all about the identity of this brain-state and that experience. But where in 'brain activities' are you going to find those logical connections? One thing for sure, is that without the ability to make rational inferences, to say 'this data means that', and so on, you can't even begin to examine the brain at all. But that is the very faculty you're purporting to explain! You can't put logic aside, and see where in the mass of neural data these are being represented; what you will be looking at, is a massive amount of data, and then trying to make correlations between data and meaning. — Wayfarer
You must be saying something other than that you don't know what terms like "brain states" and "brain activities" refer to. — Terrapin Station
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