I'm taking this to another level, even further than Descartes who doubted the reliability of his perception. I'm asking you to think about your mind, i.e., think about thinking itself. Ask yourself, "What if my own cognition is distorted?" Maybe I'm not thinking straight, or perhaps I even have skewed version of reality? It's easy to point to a person who has "lost their minds", and not so easy to ask yourself, "have I lost my mind?". — Purple Pond
Can you trust your own mind?
"My mind is absolutely unreliable". How would I proceed from there? Perhaps I can rely on someone else's mind. — Purple Pond
What do you believe and why and/or how did you arrive at that belief?
We don't know where do we get the meaning for anything at all. We don't really know what the word "meaning" actually means. — Zelebg
Suppose I muster the courage to say, "My mind is absolutely unreliable". How would I proceed from there? — Wheatley
Does this OP make sense? I don't know, I don't trust my own mind, so I leave it to you. — Wheatley
Can a person, for example, doubt the reliability of their own minds? — Wheatley
"My mind is absolutely unreliable". How would I proceed from there? — Wheatley
It's easy to point to a person who has "lost their minds", and not so easy to ask yourself, "have I lost my mind?". — Wheatley
Suppose I muster the courage to say, "My mind is absolutely unreliable". How would I proceed from there? Perhaps I can rely on someone else's mind. — Wheatley
In the process of deciding who is an expert and that their minds are reliable (in that specific expertise) you are trusting you own mind.Perhaps I can rely on someone else's mind. I think I can. In fact I think we do it all the time, we rely on experts, people who's minds are reliable (albeit in that specific expertise) — Wheatley
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Re: Can you trust your own mind?
What is the "you" that is being referred to in this sentence? Is the mind something that is separate from the "you", and is something that the "you" owns? — Harry Hindu
So the question can be re-written as "Can perceptions and conclusions trust the perceptions' and conclusions' own mind?"? How does that make any sense?I took it to mean 'perceptions and conclusions'. People can clearly see and hear things that aren't, for the rest of us, there at all. We must assume we need confirmation for our world-view, I suppose. — iolo
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