Per the rule above, as idea. But I wonder if you'd care to make the argument that consciousness is some kind of material thing, for it must seem that while ideas may exist, and come and go, that that which has them cannot be as ephemeral, or as ephemeral in the same way. Nice point, either way!If mental constructs exist then I guess a fortiori consciousness must also exist. — Pantagruel
I think you're on to something. Now make the case! I'm in between, because I suppose that existing things inhere in something somehow. Per above, material or idea. Are we thus obliged to subsume idea and consciousness under the material existence of the brain? And it must seem, then, that every question of being then is at the same time a question of materiality - which it may be! On the other hand, consciousness a fortiori calls for a something that is conscious....Yes, I thought that consciousness "having" an idea ought to be different from conscious qua idea. Unless we are saying that an idea can have an idea? — Pantagruel
If you might stub your toe on it, then it's difficult to see how it isn't. — tim wood
Argumentum ad lapidem (English: "appeal to the stone") is a logical fallacy that consists in dismissing a statement as absurd, invalid, or incorrect, without giving proof of its absurdity.
Ad lapidem statements are fallacious because they fail to address the merits of the claim in dispute. The same applies to proof by assertion, where an unproved or disproved claim is asserted as true on no ground other than that of its truth having been asserted.
The name of this fallacy is derived from a famous incident in which Dr. Samuel Johnson claimed to disprove Bishop Berkeley's immaterialist philosophy (that there are no material objects, only minds and ideas in those minds) by kicking a large stone and asserting, "I refute it thus." This action, which is said to fail to prove the existence of the stone outside the ideas formed by perception, is said to fail to contradict Berkeley's argument, and has been seen as merely dismissing it. — Wikipedia
I don't think we have to assume reductionism. Chemical properties emerge from physical systems which have evolved to a certain level of complexity, but chemical properties are not reducible to physical properties. They are undeniably real, and form the basis of further empirical inquiry. So why should consciousness be any different than that? — Pantagruel
I offer here what I think is an exhaustive listing (i.e., why it might be a short thread).
1) All material things.
2) All other things existing by reference, but not material, as ideas/mental constructs. — tim wood
This should be a short thread that generates little controversy. The idea is to list as many differing kinds of existing/existence/existing things as we can think of. Part of the goal is to identify which things/classes of things may be reasonably said to exist, and also both to weed out unsupportable claims and to rule out "things" for which there is no direct evidence.
Now for some guidelines, all of which are tentative and offered to facilitate reasonable colloquy, and that are amendable for cause.
1) We need a word of convenience to refer to the what it is we shall be listing. The word "thing" irresistibly suggests itself. Being mindful that our usage will inevitably include reference to things not usually either called things or regarded as things - understanding the ambiguity - we adopt "thing" as being merely a pointer word, itself agnostic as to the thing referred to.
1a) Material existence shall be an absolute qualification for existence - the materiality, obviously, being demonstrable. If you might stub your toe on it, then it's difficult to see how it isn't.
2) It must seem as if a lot of things will be almost automatically included into the list of things that exist. The earth, a pencil, brick, chair, airplane, & etc. There's no need to list multiple individuals if they may all be entered as a class. And in this there may quickly emerge a taxonomy of sorts, of existing things. Classes of things, then, supersede individuals, they being included mutatis mutandis in the class.
3) It's possible that some contention may arise as to whether a candidate thing exists, which may include reference to the how of the existence claimed. For example, two, the number, may be claimed to exist, the question of how or in what form then arising. Platonists may claim that two has some super-sensible existence as a Platonic form. For present purpose all such, for inclusion in a listing of existing things, must be listed as ideas/mental constructs - the existence of two as an idea being self-evident, and any claim beyond that being no more than a claim. The test here being demonstrability, and the further from being self-evident the candidate being, the more rigorous the demonstration ought to be. Or in short, the thing either exists self-evidently (which may be subject to challenge), or some demonstration proves its existence, the proof based in self-evident propositions. No Voodoo, no woowoo.
I offer here what I think is an exhaustive listing (i.e., why it might be a short thread).
1) All material things.
2) All other things existing by reference, but not material, as ideas/mental constructs. — tim wood
Because Johnson did not understand that Berkeley was referring to the so-called "philosopher's substance" and thought instead that he was referring to the stone itself.Do you understand why Samuel Johnson said that of George Berkeley's philosophy, and why his response is regarded as fallacious? — Wayfarer
I'll leave it to someone else to list each grain of sand. — Terrapin Station
???There's no need to list multiple individuals if they may all be entered as a class. And in this there may quickly emerge a taxonomy of sorts, of existing things. Classes of things, then, supersede individuals, they being included mutatis mutandis in the class. — tim wood
What about the relationships between "things"? They can be physical or abstract, — ZhouBoTong
Do you understand why Samuel Johnson said that of George Berkeley's philosophy, and why his response is regarded as fallacious?
— Wayfarer
Because Johnson did not understand that Berkeley was referring to the so-called "philosopher's substance" and thought instead that he was referring to the stone itself. — tim wood
Material existence shall be an absolute qualification for existence - the materiality, obviously, being demonstrable. If you might stub your toe on it, then it's difficult to see how it isn't. — tim wood
For example, two, the number, may be claimed to exist, the question of how or in what form then arising. Platonists may claim that two has some super-sensible existence as a Platonic form. For present purpose all such, for inclusion in a listing of existing things, must be listed as ideas/mental constructs - the existence of two as an idea being self-evident, and any claim beyond that being no more than a claim. — tim wood
In this you get exactly the point, you just don't yet know it.He precisely denies that there are material substances at all. — Wayfarer
I do not see philosophy as being altogether detached from reality. That would be just a game. At the moment I'm not interested in playing a game - maybe someone else.... As to the two criteria suggested above, do you have categories of existence to add? My own view is that categories cannot simply be asserted without some convincing argument, else we be without any criteria and the concept of existence thereby meaningless.In a more general sense, you're simply assuming a position of common-sense realism, as if that is the sine qua non of philosophy, proper; and then venturing that anything we might care to claim exists, must meet the criterion of being either a material existent, or an idea in the mind. — Wayfarer
But you have to have the underlying ideas before you can even approach these. Yes, the laws are real - as ideas. If you wish to demonstrate that they are not ideas, then you cannot have ideas to demonstrate them. Try kicking one? How do you have two without mind?...once we begin to acknowledge the reality of such mental objects as numbers and logical laws.... — Wayfarer
So you could just make the top-level class "stuff" and leave it at that.
Or in other words, classes/kinds/types are simply a matter of how we want to conceptualize things, how we want to divide them up. — Terrapin Station
A physical relationship? Care to say how that is? — tim wood
The key phrase is "no material substance." The ideas of stones & etc., are indeed ideas, but the underlying reality of them was not the target of Berkeley's attack — tim wood
Maybe I should offer a tentative definition of existence, or at least that which falls out of my two categories above: objects of thinking or sense or some combination, but in combination reducible to either object of thought or sense by parts. — tim wood
Am I to suppose that you are arguing that the stone does not exist? Nor do I claim to have made an analysis, but just to have thought about existence and what can be said to exist, and how. Have I erred somewhere? Do stones demonstrably not exist? That would be tricky ground. Do ideas not exist? And are there other categories I've overlooked? @ZhouBoTong mentions above forces. I'm thinking forces are non-material existing things, but I'm not sure, nor have I figured out the consequences.Clearly that is what you think, but it is not informed by philosophical analysis. — Wayfarer
Don't we need a definition of what it means to "exist" before we can proceed with an inquiry like this? The difficult thing is to get a definition which we can all agree on. If you define "exist" as "being material" then you'll be accused of being a materialist begging the question. So I propose something like "being present' as defining what it means to exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe I should offer a tentative definition of existence, or at least that which falls out of my two categories above: objects of thinking or sense or some combination, but in combination reducible to either object of thought or sense by parts. — tim wood
As this passage illustrates, Berkeley does not deny the existence of ordinary objects such as stones, trees, books, and apples. On the contrary, as was indicated above, he holds that only an immaterialist account of such objects can avoid skepticism about their existence and nature. — tim wood
So do you accept his ‘immaterialist’ account? Because it certainly seems hard to reconcile with your 1(a). — Wayfarer
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