And, mind is what we, humans, refer to our awareness-response mechanism. So I guess you were right all along, consciousness is indivisible. :wink: — BrianW
The proof for premise 1, is according to you, "it appears to be" which, despite it being couched in a hedge, is easy to confirm through personal experience: I'm aware of my mental processes and also that I exist, distinct from others and actually consider myself to be quite like the driver of a vehicle, steering the body to do my bidding. Also, as you said, there's no sense in which I could talk of a half or a quarter of my mind. — TheMadFool
However, notice something about your immaterial mind. It, based on being simple (indivisible), being immaterial AND being uncaused is exactly identical to nothing. So, now I present you an analogical argument: — TheMadFool
It is not a 'proof', but 'evidence' — Bartricks
Appearances, whether sensible or rational, are prima facie evidence of the reality of what they represent to be the case. That's a principle of intellectual inquiry without which you'd be unable to argue for anything at all. For instance, it is on the basis of rational appearances that we recognise this argument form: — Bartricks
I have twice now explained why this is obviously not so.
First, it is a conceptual truth that 'nothing' is not a thing. By contrast my mind is a thing.
Here's an argument for that (if one were needed):
1. If there are mental states, there is an object - a thing, called 'a mind' - that they are the states of
2. There are mental states
3. Therefore there is an object - a thing, called 'a mind' - that they are the states of.
And minds think, whereas 'nothing' does not. — Bartricks
First, no - if the steering mechanism fails 'I' lose the ability to steer the car. Second - congratulations on completely missing the point. — Bartricks
Er no. I never said "consciousness is indivisible". I said my 'mind' is indivisible. Mind. Not 'consciousness'. Consciousness is a 'state' of a thing, not a thing itself. I am conscious. I am not consciousness.
Oh, sorry, I forgot, you need to go check if 'science' confirms that. — Bartricks
Here, you're trying to blur the line between the conventional meaning of "appearance" and truth. — TheMadFool
Appearances are deceptive and therefore we rely on rationality as you have. — TheMadFool
I could easily rephrase your argument as follows:
1. If there are mental states, there is an object - a material thing, called a brain - that they are the states of
2. There are mental states
3. Therefore there is an object - a material thing, called a brain - that they are states of — TheMadFool
You call that which is indivisible, mind. I call it consciousness. Science calls it energy. Etc. Etc.
Like I said, you were right. Do you have a problem with that, too? — BrianW
Er, yes, obviously I have a problem because it is false. Baby steps. Consciousness is a mental state. Mental 'state'. That means 'state of mind'. A 'state of mind' is a - ooo wait for it - a. state. of. a. mind. State of a mind, not a mind. State of a mind, not a mind. State of a mind. not a mind. State of a mind. Not a mind.
The mind is the thing. Consciousness is a state of it. Write that out a thousand times. Then tattoo 'mind' on your left hand and 'state of mind' on your right so that you remember that they're distinct. — Bartricks
No, I am using the word 'mind' conventionally. It is conventionally used to denote the object that bears our conscious experiences. — Bartricks
If I say "banks are financial institutions and they're corrupt" you are not even addressing me if you say "banks are the sides of rivers and they are wet". — Bartricks
treasuries are financial institutions and they're corrupt.
I mean by 'mind' - the 'object that is bearing our conscious experiences'. — Bartricks
The philosophical debate is over what kind of an object it is - material, or immaterial. — Bartricks
If I say "banks are indivisible" and you reply "cornflakes are indivisible" then you are not addressing me. Sinking in yet? — Bartricks
If you mean by 'consciousness' what I mean by 'mind', then you should use 'mind' not 'consciousness' as I'm the one who's made the argument. This is especially so given that I use 'consciousness' to refer to 'the state of consciousness' (like, you know, everyone else does). — Bartricks
You mean 'imply' not 'infer'. — Bartricks
I argued that indivisibility entails immateriality. — Bartricks
If the meaning of indivisibility is identical, then banks and cornflakes are just synonymous names. Get it? — BrianW
No. I meant infer. I gave an example of my observation of certain phenomena and from it deduced that possibility. — BrianW
No you couldn't! That's a 'different' argument because it has different premises!!
All you can conclude from the fact there are states, is that there is 'some thing' that they are the states of. Whether it is a material or immaterial thing is what needs to be shown, not assumed.
So that is not - absolutely not - my argument, but a completely different argument with a flagrantly question begging first premise!
Like I say, you don't know how to argue responsibly. — Bartricks
If there are mental states, there is an object - a thing, called 'a mind' - that they are the states of or my premise: If there are mental states, there is an object - a thing, called 'a brain' - that they are states of is true. — TheMadFool
Again, one of those - mine - is an a priori truth of reason. Or do you think that it makes sense that a mental state could exist absent an object that it is the state of? — Bartricks
er, no. You - you- keep affirming the consequent. I have not. My arguments are all valid. — Bartricks
er, no. You - you- keep affirming the consequent. I have not. My arguments are all valid. — Bartricks
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