My arguments have the premises they have. Are you disputing one? Which one — Bartricks
and why? — Bartricks
The idea that we each have a mind, except in a manner of speaking about our physical constitution and behaviour. — bongo fury
Partly because I suspect that arguments like yours would show that this idea leads easily to the fantasies (as they seem to me) of immaterial souls and the like. So I would see your argument, if it works, as a reductio. — bongo fury
I doubt (as also no doubt will you) that I am qualified to offer the kind of stress test of your argument that you seek. I thought I would try instead to see if there was any chance of getting you to appreciate the possibility that animals might evolve without acquiring any non-physical aspect or component, but then also in certain cases be able and inclined to think the opposite. — bongo fury
Ah, I see. So because you already know how things are with reality and my arguments contradict your understanding, my arguments must be faulty. — Bartricks
It seems you think you're God. — Bartricks
How do you doubt something without a mind? — Bartricks
And yes, if there actually are any extended sensible objects then I accept entirely the possibility that a sensible body might evolve without there being any soul inside it. — Bartricks
a typist without a mind....which is a bot — Bartricks
No, I said I suspect your argument is valid. — bongo fury
But don't forget I have a mind in a manner of speaking about my physical constitution and behaviour. — bongo fury
Of course, if one just decides - as you seem to have - that our minds are not souls, — Bartricks
But then you're the fantasist, as you're deciding how things are with reality and then closing your mind to evidence to the contrary. — Bartricks
But don't forget I have a mind in a manner of speaking about my physical constitution and behaviour.
— bongo fury
What do you mean? Do you mean you do have a mind or that you don't? — Bartricks
Incidentally, I think the appropriate manner of speaking (which disqualifies any present-day bot) is to imply skill in the social game of agreeing (or disagreeing) about which words and pictures are being pointed at which objects out in the world. — bongo fury
And thoughts are mental states. — Bartricks
What's confused about it? I somehow decide to raise my arm, then I act of my volition to raise it. Then, the arm moves. The arm is definitely material. If the decision and will are mind, and the mind is immaterial, then the immaterial would be affecting the material.To be capable of understanding the answer you'd first have to be recognize why that's a confused question to ask. — Bartricks
Sure, but we're facing a claim that the mind is immaterial. And we know of multiple kinds of interactions between the physical and the mind... it's not just that I can lift my arm; I can also see things based on the light entering my eyes; not to mention the modulation of mental states by drugs. It's enough in the face of a claim of immateriality to ask what it even means to claim that the mind is immaterial in the first place.But he's not asking for evidence of interaction, he's asking 'how' it can happen, which is quite different. — Bartricks
'there's no materiality, as everything is made of tiny bananas, not tiny apples'. — Bartricks
Well it's consistent with this:Do you understand, for instance, that even if there is no way to answer it that will satisfy the asker (and there invariably isn't because they mean by an 'explanation' a purely materialist one) that isn't evidence it doesn't occur? — Bartricks
By all means prove me wrong, — Bartricks
Do you understand, for instance, that even if there is no way to answer it that will satisfy the asker (and there invariably isn't because they mean by an 'explanation' a purely materialist one) that isn't evidence it doesn't occur?
— Bartricks
Well it's consistent with this:
By all means prove me wrong,
— Bartricks — InPitzotl
You're entirely correct... not having an explanation for how the immaterial interacts with the material isn't proof that the mind isn't material. — InPitzotl
you should be held to the same standard in your proofs of its immateriality. — InPitzotl
...then the second set looks a bit better than the former set, unless we build some straw version of materialism where the Linux kernel, not having a weight, taste, or color, is immaterial. — InPitzotl
Well, no, because consciousness is not an object at all, but a state. It's typical of your sloppiness that you treat consciousness and minds as equivalent, which is as silly as confusing thoughts with thinkers. — Bartricks
it must have at least one (else in what possible sense is it 'sensible'?) — Bartricks
There is a sizable population that believes there is no such problem.... heck I would say the majority don’t think it’s a problem
— khaled
Okaay. You might want to get in touch with the world's philosophy departments and point this out then. — Bartricks
Psst, whether lumps of ham are minds is what is in dispute. — Bartricks
2. If minds were sensible objects, then it would make sense to wonder what a sensible object thinks
— Bartricks
Overgeneralization. It could just be the case that it makes sense to wonder what some sensible objects (such as minds, according to the position you're arguing against) think, while others (such as olives) not. In which case the conclusion doesn't follow. — khaled
No it doesn't. The claim that if something comes into being it has a prior cause is not equivalent to causal determinism. — Bartricks
4. If I am a sensible object, then everything I do traces to external causes — Bartricks
But a reasonably intelligent person, upon asking "Is Megan at the party? And are there any dogs at the party?" and receiving the answer "Megan is certainly here, but I am not sure if there are any dogs here" would conclude that Megan was not a dog. — Bartricks
Surely. It is, of course, possible that Megan is a dog, for it is possible that though the host knows Megan is at the party, the host does not know whether Megan is a dog. — Bartricks
I could claim that nothing is harmful at t1 (moment of death, which is premise 2).
— khaled
Yes, you could couldn't you. — Bartricks
: every extended object has a top and a bottom — Bartricks
Your confusing 'currently unable to divide it' with it being metaphysically impossible to divide it. — Bartricks
So, I can conceive of myself existing, and my brain not. — Bartricks
Well I read this:No it isn't. Obviously. What did I just say? — Bartricks
Do you understand, for instance, that even if there is no way to answer it that will satisfy the asker (and there invariably isn't because they mean by an 'explanation' a purely materialist one) that isn't evidence it doesn't occur? — Bartricks
But "material" has to mean something, and it has to mean something sensible, else all statements you make about what is and what isn't material are either meaningless or irrelevant. Let's phrase it this way... suppose I invoke Laplace's "I had no need for that hypothesis" idiom here. Well, all of the interactions between the mind and the physical are consistent with the mind being a function of what a brain is doing. Yes, that doesn't mean the mind isn't immaterial, but the bigger question here is, what is the need for that hypothesis?I just said that 'even if' two objects of different kinds are incapable of causal interaction, that does 'not' show that the mind is material. — Bartricks
I don't see what you're correcting here.That's not what I said. I said not having an explanation of how something is occurring is not evidence it is not occurring. — Bartricks
The computer scenario isn't analogous; nobody is arguing minds don't work, and nobody is arguing the mind and body doesn't interact. You're claiming the mind is immaterial. But we know the mind interacts physically in multiple ways. So if it's immaterial, that immaterial thing is interacting in quite a lot of ways similar to how a material thing interacts with the physical. It's a fair question, then, what it even means to presume said mind is immaterial. Again, what is the need for that hypothesis?It's a distinct point. I don't know how this computer is working. Is that evidence it is not working. No.
So, 'if' I don't know how the mind and body interact, that is not evidence that they do not interact. — Bartricks
You've mentioned this multiple times, as if it's making a point, but I'm not convinced that this should be all that surprising. Suppose I had a giant hat; I passed it to everyone in this forum, and I asked them to write one argument either for the mind being material, or for it being immaterial, and slip it into the hat. Once I've collected the arguments, I draw 10 arguments from the hat. What do you suppose the probability is that all 10 of those arguments would be for the mind being immaterial? I would gather that probability would be incredibly low.Yes, I provided 10 arguments. Each argument has premises that are far more plausible than their negations. — Bartricks
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