Cotard's delusion, also known as walking corpse syndrome or Cotard's syndrome, is a rare mental disorder in which the affected person holds the delusional belief that he or she [...] does not exist[...] — Wikipedia
I have come across some Buddhist accounts which certainly challenge the idea of the self — Jack Cummins
Having said something, one has expressed a distinction that makes a difference.
Descartes' "I exist" is, at best, a tautology; he concludes only what his conclusion already necessarily presupposes. Saying "I exist", therefore, doesn't actually say anything.
Cotard's "I do not exist", a delusion, is a pathology; otherwise, as a statement (rather than a feeling) it's a performative contradiction, which says nothing.
In other words, the latter cannot be said and the former need not be said: neither expresses a distinction that makes a difference. — 180 Proof
I believe that the biggest danger is that when we are thinking about the self — Jack Cummins
Nevertheless, it can't be denied that people with Cotard delusion present a direct challenge to Descartes' cogito, ergo sum argument. Here's Descartes, confidently asserting, "I exist" and there's patients with Cotard delusion insisting, as — TheMadFool
People are thus what Metzinger calls naïve realists, who believe they are perceiving reality directly when in actuality they are only perceiving representations of reality. The data structures and transport mechanisms of the data are "transparent" so that people can introspect on their representations of perceptions, but cannot introspect on the data or mechanisms themselves — Wikipedia
The user illusion is the illusion created for the user by a human–computer interface, for example the visual metaphor of a desktop used in many graphical user interfaces. The phrase originated at Xerox PARC.[1]
Some philosophers of mind have argued that consciousness is a form of user illusion. This notion is explored by Tor Nørretranders in his 1991 Danish book Mærk verden, issued in a 1998 English edition as The User Illusion: Cutting Consciousness Down to Size. — Wikipedia
Dennett says that only a theory that explained conscious events in terms of unconscious events could explain consciousness at all: "To explain is to explain away". — Wikipedia
Why is someone's illogical refusal to accept a logical conclusion a direct challenge to the legitimacy of the conclusion? — Hanover
philosophical danger — Jack Cummins
No. It merely repeats itself.
A bachelor is an unmarried man. Identity.
A bachelor is a bachelor. Tautology.
The latter does not convey any information, the former is a definition of the first term by the second. — 180 Proof
Descartes is doing a little bit more than a tautology. He talking about a necessary aspect given a particular existing event. That's to say if there is an experience, there is an individual or entity aware of soemthing — TheWillowOfDarkness
The cogito is the latter. If the former, it would read, "I think, therefore I think." — Hanover
One common critique of the dictum is that it presupposes that there is an "I" which must be doing the thinking. According to this line of criticism, the most that Descartes was entitled to say was that "thinking is occurring", not that "I am thinking" — Wikipedia
The Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard calls the phrase a tautology in his Concluding Unscientific Postscript.[48]:38–42 He argues that the cogito already presupposes the existence of "I", and therefore concluding with existence is logically trivial. Kierkegaard's argument can be made clearer if one extracts the premise "I think" into the premises "'x' thinks" and "I am that 'x'", where "x" is used as a placeholder in order to disambiguate the "I" from the thinking thing.[49] — Wikipedia
At the beginning of the second meditation, having reached what he considers to be the ultimate level of doubt—his argument from the existence of a deceiving god—Descartes examines his beliefs to see if any have survived the doubt. In his belief in his own existence, he finds that it is impossible to doubt that he exists. Even if there were a deceiving god (or an evil demon), one's belief in their own existence would be secure, for there is no way one could be deceived unless one existed in order to be deceived. — Wikipedia
Here's Descartes, confidently asserting, "I exist" and there's patients with Cotard delusion insisting, as confidently if not more so that "they don't exist."
It's a delusion — RogueAI
We can quibble about what "I" means — RogueAI
Also, besides, "the Cogito" was basically laughed out of court philosophically by Spinoza, Hume, Kant, Feuerbach, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Wittgenstein, Dewey et al. — 180 Proof
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