Is that analogous to being unable to answer the question "Are you sleeping" in the affirmative?For an analogy - it is possible for me not to exist, but I am never going to be justified in believing such a state of affair obtains). — Bartricks
It's less clear how this informs one about the nature of evolution.And what I argue is that for a mental state to have representative contents, it has to be being used by an agent for the purpose of representing what it is representing. — Bartricks
Is that analogous to being unable to answer the question "Are you sleeping" in the affirmative? — Cheshire
And what I argue is that for a mental state to have representative contents, it has to be being used by an agent for the purpose of representing what it is representing.
— Bartricks
It's less clear how this informs one about the nature of evolution. — Cheshire
No, as in imprecise or conceptually different?No. — Bartricks
Why insist on calling something by a negated state? Not Unguided means guided, correct?Because if true, then in combination with premise 2 it tells us that the evolutionary processes that have furnished us with our faculties of awareness have not been unguided. — Bartricks
No, as in imprecise or conceptually different? — Cheshire
Is that analogous to being unable to answer the question "Are you sleeping" in the affirmative? — Cheshire
Why insist on calling something by a negated state? Not Unguided means guided, correct? — Cheshire
I'm not being tedious. I thought something was hiding behind your choice to select 'not unguided' versus 'guided'. Deciding this is the point at which this exchange became tedious reinforces my suspicion.Stop being tedious. — Bartricks
Really? I assumed it was in reference to an awake person asking some one obviously asleep if they were sleeping. Yes, I am sleeping would be an unanswerable form of awareness. Smells the same.No, for it is both metaphysically possible that I am sleeping right now (and thus that this is a dream) and I can believe it coherently. I may even acquire evidence that it is true (if, for example, I suddenly find that I am a horse or something). So just not the same at all. — Bartricks
Really? I assumed it was in reference to an awake person asking some one obviously asleep if they were sleeping. Yes, I am sleeping would be an unanswerable form of awareness. Smells the same. — Cheshire
Frankly, I'm a bit neutral. It sounds like it intends to be self-evident much like the other premise. Are you asking if I'm hearing something I must be deliberately using my ears?But anyway, do you have any objection to what I argued in defence of premise 1? That is, do you agree that for something to be a representation, some agency needs to be using for that purpose? — Bartricks
I thought it was beneficial to confirm I understood what you were saying well enough to demonstrate it through an adjacent example. I was having trouble nailing down number 1's defense, so why not confirm number 2.What's the point in coming up with other examples when mine does what's necessary? — Bartricks
Quite the opposite apparently:Similarly, the idea that all of our apparent states of awareness are in fact fake, contains no contradiction either. But once more, we would be confused if we ever thought it a reality. — Bartricks
...assuming having a 'belief' that you're aware means you aren't aware, we wouldn't even be able to tell, at least through introspection. What other tests of awareness besides introspection can we perform?(where a 'belief' is introspectively indiscernible from a belief, but nevertheless isn't one). — Bartricks
Frankly, I'm a bit neutral. It sounds like it intends to be self-evident much like the other premise. Are you asking if I'm hearing something I must be deliberately using my ears? — Cheshire
1. If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not give us an awareness of anything — Bartricks
Similarly, the idea that all of our apparent states of awareness are in fact fake, contains no contradiction either. But once more, we would be confused if we ever thought it a reality.
— Bartricks
Quite the opposite apparently:
(where a 'belief' is introspectively indiscernible from a belief, but nevertheless isn't one).
— Bartricks — InPitzotl
Bartricks... this is trivial.What? You keep doing this — Bartricks
...then 'belief' that you're aware is introspectively indiscernible from belief that you're aware.If that's correct, then surely this applies to all of the beliefs that one acquires? — Bartricks
...and 'belief' that you are aware does not constitute knowledge that you are aware.in this case that your belief that there is a pie in the oven does not constitute knowledge that there is a pie in the oven. — Bartricks
...how do you know you know, given you could just be dreaming you know? Introspection is the wrong answer, because knowing cannot arise from 'belief', and belief and 'belief' are introspectively indistinguishable.We do know we exist and a whole lot else, of course. — Bartricks
If 'belief' is introspectively indiscernible from belief, and:
If that's correct, then surely this applies to all of the beliefs that one acquires?
— Bartricks
...then 'belief' that you're aware is introspectively indiscernible from belief that you're aware.
in this case that your belief that there is a pie in the oven does not constitute knowledge that there is a pie in the oven.
— Bartricks
...and 'belief' that you are aware does not constitute knowledge that you are aware.
So:
We do know we exist and a whole lot else, of course.
— Bartricks
...how do you know you know, given you could just be dreaming you know? Introspection is the wrong answer, because knowing cannot arise from 'belief', and belief and 'belief' are introspectively indistinguishable. — InPitzotl
No. But I think "of course we know" appeals to introspection. And you're way too busy trying to ask me stupid questions to bother answering the one I asked you.You think it does, right? — Bartricks
The contradiction has to do with something being "introspectively X" to an entity that isn't aware. What I'm highlighting here is just a conflict (that you're dodging).That's the only way you could possibly think my claim that we can know we're aware — Bartricks
So, here it is again... how do you know you're aware? — InPitzotl
Your defense of premise 2 doesn't erase the conflict.See the defence of premise 2. — Bartricks
You're stuck again. Try a re-spoon feed:Do you now see that there is no contradiction? — Bartricks
Did you read it this time?The contradiction has to do with something being "introspectively X" to an entity that isn't aware. What I'm highlighting here is just a conflict (that you're dodging). — InPitzotl
Sure. You reach in your pocket and boom... there it is. (Of course, that's refutable using lines from your OP, but let's set that aside).I can know that I have a real banknote in my pocket even though it is possible for there to exist a visually indiscernible note that is not real. — Bartricks
FTFY.Premise 1establishesasserts that in order for us to be aware of anything our mental states would need to have feature P. — Bartricks
...means fake belief is introspectively indiscernible from real belief. Hey look there's a squirrel doesn't change what this means.(where a 'belief' is introspectively indiscernible from a belief, but nevertheless isn't one). — Bartricks
Yes, we covered the contradictions which you didn't find compelling. So, I was at least trying to understand the matter from your point of view. But, I don't think I can without knowing what implications you believe are being demonstrated by this information. All I honestly know is that it seems you want to make a statement about evolution and you are trying to derive it along the lines of an 'ergo sum'. However, you don't seem to believe it is without flaws yourself due to the excessive appeals to emotion and evasion of plain questions.You just veer from telling me I've contradicted myself to refusing to say clearly which premise you dispute. I ask you what objection you have to premise 1 and you give me concerns that only make sense as concerns about premise 2. You're all over the place. — Bartricks
And like I say, you've got this backwards. It's your job to make a valid and coherent argument, not my job to prove to you that your argument is invalid. Anything I do is gratis.Like I say, read it when you can understand it, and then address it. — Bartricks
2. Our faculties of awareness do provide us with some awareness of something — Bartricks
Picking out the logic, here's how this reads.I take it that any attempt to deny this premise will undermine itself. For if, on the basis of what I have said above combined with a conviction that we are indeed a product of unguided evolutionary processes, you are persuaded that we are not aware of anything, then you will have to admit that you are not aware of that too. Which makes no real sense. — Bartricks
...and we lose the ability to tell if we are aware. Your argument doesn't show that; 4 doesn't even apply to us, since we think we are aware and 2 is just talking about an entity that thinks it isn't aware. How do you know you're not, as you put it, bot built and just dreaming that you're aware?(where a 'belief' is introspectively indiscernible from a belief, but nevertheless isn't one). — Bartricks
Don't waffle on about something orthogonal to this issue. Just focus. Focus on premise 1 and its incredible plausibility. It isn't open to reasonable doubt. To doubt it is to think that there can be representations that lack a representer. And that's to think that the clouds could be telling you about a pie in the oven. — Bartricks
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