Nothing is not a thing. So saying it is indivisible is a category error. — Bartricks
If nothing, is not a thing and the mind is a thing then observe they are exactly identical with respect to the properties you listed. You'll have to provide me with a property that distinguishes the two and demonstrate how the category error is apt to the issue. — TheMadFool
↪tomatohorse
One possibility is that "mind" is a word we use to describe the sum output of all human brain processes.
— tomatohorse
That's not how the word is traditionally used and it is not how I am using it. It means 'that which bears our conscious experiences".
So, it refers to an 'object' not a 'process'. — Bartricks
"the mind is simple because I experience it to be so." — tomatohorse
Nothing is not a thing - there's no serious dispute about that. I mean, it is there in the word itself - 'no-thing'. Nothing. Not a thing. Nothing.
They are not identical. For one thing, my mind is a thing and nothing is not. Big difference. Doesn't actually get bigger than that.
Also, my mind thinks. That's one of its properties - it thinks things. Nothing doesn't. And so on.
I suggest that you are confusing 'immaterial' with 'non-existent' and 'material' with 'existent'. Not the same. — Bartricks
Er, no. I literally just told you the ways in which a mind - which is a thing - differs from nothing. And you then reply that I am making a thing out of nothing. Sheesh - can you read?
Nothing is not a thing. My mind is. Big difference. So, my mind is not nothing.
My mind thinks. Nothing doesn't. Big difference. So my mind is not nothing.
And on and on.
But don't let a proof get in the way of a conviction. Good job! — Bartricks
Firstly, modern science has proved, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that it's the brain that thinks. We've even mapped out the regions of the brain concerned with specific mental activity. — TheMadFool
Ergo, you must realize that you will have to move your business into the immaterial and your arguments on the mind being immaterial rest on 1) indivisibility and that I've brought to your notice is insufficient to make a clear distinction between the mind, considered immaterial and nothing. That's why in my humble opinion, you're trying to make a thing of nothing. — TheMadFool
No it hasn't! All science has shown - and this is hardly recent - is that events in the brain affect what goes on in the mind. If one thing affects another, that does not show they're the same thing! For instance, your responses are making me cross. That is, they are causing in me a certain mental state. Now, that doesn't show that I am your responses, does it! Or that your responses are my mental states. Yet by your logic it would. — Bartricks
Harris states that damage to certain parts of the brain results in a specific loss of function corresponding to that part. So if your speech center is damaged, you lose the ability to speak. Now, if one thinks the mind survives death then it must mean that the entire brain shutting down is of no consequence for the mind. — TheMadFool
The mind is divisible by the fact that when you die it will disintegrate. — BrianW
So if your speech center is damaged, you lose the ability to speak. Now, if one thinks the mind survives death then it must mean that the entire brain shutting down is of no consequence for the mind. — TheMadFool
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