What's complex about it? Mental phenomena exists and behaves in certain ways. How is it any different to saying that physical things exist in behave in certain ways? — Michael
Things coming into and out of existence depending on whether they are being perceived by a consciouses or not, is hugely complex — tom
Also, while non-existing, reality clearly creates records. How does it do that while it doesn't exist?
But the veracity of idealism isn't the issue here. The issue is whether or not idealism entails solipsism. — Michael
But that is the issue. To defend idealism against the charge of solipsism, you wish to make a special claim for consciousness - that other minds persist (but trees do not) because they are self-aware (i.e., experience themselves). I am trying to examine that claim. If another mind can ever be shown to be non-self-aware (i.e., not experiencing itself) then it would appear to be no different from trees in terms of its continued existence when not being experienced by me. — Real Gone Cat
Let us accept for the moment that minds persist when unconscious or in non-dreaming sleep. I assume then that you must hold the belief that (higher order) animals also persist when not being perceived by humans, for surely the mental ability of a wakeful dog is the equivalent of an unconscious human. To believe otherwise seems to me to be a case of special pleading.
What is a mind to you? To me it's a cohesive collection of thoughts and memories and experiences. Does it make sense for there to be unconscious thoughts and memories and experiences? I don't think so. Which is why I won't accept that minds persist when unconscious. The mind is consciousness. — Michael
n other words, consciousness is like a song on an old cassette tape that stops when you press the STOP button, and starts up again from the exact same point when PLAY is pushed. To the song (i.e., the consciousness) no time has passed at all. — Real Gone Cat
And when I leave a room full of people then walk back in a few minutes later, it is as if the conversation went on without me. Weird. — Real Gone Cat
The "to be is to be perceived" motto is a bit misleading. The idealist claim is just that only mental phenomena exists. So whatever exists, be it minds or trees or colours or pain, is mental phenomena. — Michael
Ah, so minds are not continuous (since, seemingly, a person may be unconscious for a time).
Or perhaps you are arguing for a discrete existence that only appears continuous to the observer who is "inside" that existence. I mean, should I become unconscious for a time, that time does not actually exist for me. In other words, consciousness is like a song on an old cassette tape that stops when you press the STOP button, and starts up again from the exact same point when PLAY is pushed. To the song (i.e., the consciousness) no time has passed at all. — Real Gone Cat
We also experience unreal things, — Marchesk
That's like saying that some cards are hearts and some clubs, so you need something more to justify that some cards are hearts. — Terrapin Station
And the idealist would agree. They'd just say that the real things we experience (trees, cups, etc.) don't continue to exist after the experience ends. — Michael
That would make that person a realist with an unusual ontology of how real things "behave" rather than an idealist. — Terrapin Station
Wrong. A realist believes, at minimum, that some real things exist, at least at some times. That doesn't require believing that things continue to exist when no one sees them.A realist believes that the things we see continue to exist even when nobody sees them. — Michael
Wrong. A realist believes, at minimum, that some real things exist, at least at some times. That doesn't require believing that things continue to exist when no one sees them. — Terrapin Station
My dreams, hallucinations etc. are nothing like experiences of real things. — Terrapin Station
You're not a realist if you don't believe that, because otherwise, your position is no different from anti-realism, as I'm sure Michael well tell you, or SEP, if you look. The central point of realism is mind-independence. — Marchesk
...if you can but conceive it possible for...any one idea or anything like an idea, to exist otherwise than in a mind perceiving it, I shall readily give up the cause…. But, you say, surely there is nothing easier than to imagine trees, for instance, in a park, or books existing in a closet, and nobody there to perceive them.
I answer, you may so, there is no difficulty in it: but what is all this, I beseech you, more than framing in your mind certain ideas which you call books and trees, and at the same time omitting to frame the idea of anyone that may perceive them? But do not you yourself perceive or think of them all the while? This therefore is nothing to the purpose: it only shows you have the power of imagining or forming ideas in your mind; but it doesn't show that you can conceive it possible [that] the objects of your thought may exist without the mind: to [show] this, it is necessary that you conceive them existing unconceived or unthought of, which is a manifest repugnancy. When we do our utmost to conceive the existence of external bodies, we are all the while only contemplating our own ideas. But the mind taking no notice of itself, is deluded to think it can and does conceive bodies existing unthought of or without the mind; though at the same time they are apprehended by or exist in itself. — Berkeley
A realist believes, at minimum, that some real things exist, at least at some times. That doesn't require believing that things continue to exist when no one sees them. — Terrapin Station
I recall reading something interesting about Schizophrenia were schizophrenics lose the ability to tell the difference between what's in their heads, and what they're perceiving. Apparently, the brain flags stuff that's generated internally. — Marchesk
would have thought the fundamental issue of schizophrenia was the ability to recognise one's thoughts and internal states as being one's own. Hence 'a voice told me to do it'. What appears to be lacking is the integrative facility, i.e. the facility that integrates different thoughts, sensations, perceptions and judgements into a coherent whole; hence the popular (but frowned-upon) expression 'split personality' — Wayfarer
You're not a realist if you don't believe that, because otherwise, your position is no different from anti-realism, as I'm sure Michael well tell you, or SEP, if you look. The central point of realism is mind-independence. — Marchesk
An autonomous entity does no come into and go out of existence depending on whether a human happens to be looking at it. — tom
That wouldn't satisfy most realists, who most certainly do believe that things continue to exist unperceived. — Wayfarer
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