There are no grounds for me to doubt that I'm not a BiV so the point's moot. The idle doubts upon which 'the BiV speculation' is raised shows it's vacuous. — 180 Proof
Oh yes, I know, which is why I'm not exclusively or primarily a foundherentist (as I point out in my previous post). And I append it to the end my broader epistemic position because foundherenism is inherently fallibilist and focused on beliefs more so than knowledge (i.e. explanatory theories).Foundherentism is a theory of justification. — bert1
That is, your answer to the question "Do you know whether or not you're a brain-in-a-vat whether or not you're a brain-in-a-vat ..." is actually Yes. You do know. Right? :)No. There is no reason to believe we are a brain-in-a-vat, but there is equally no reason to believe we are in base reality - the experience would feel "real" either way. — Down The Rabbit Hole
No. There is no reason to believe we are a brain-in-a-vat, but there is equally no reason to believe we are in base reality - the experience would feel "real" either way.
— Down The Rabbit Hole
That is, your answer to the question "Do you know whether or not you're a brain-in-a-vat whether or not you're a brain-in-a-vat ..." is actually Yes. You do know. Right? :) — Alkis Piskas
If there is no reason to believe we are a brain-in-a-vat and also there is no reason to believe we are in base reality, it means you know that neither of them is true. If there is no reason to believe that I am a fool, it means I know I am not a fool. So the answer is anyway "Yes, I know".My answer is No I don't know whether or not I'm a brain in a vat. On the basis that there is no reason to believe either way. — Down The Rabbit Hole
What's the essential difference between a skull and a vat? — Olivier5
If I'm a brain in a vat, everything I perceive is an illusion generated by simply stimulating the right combination/sequence of neurons. I cannot trust my perceptions. — TheMadFool
If there is no reason to believe we are a brain-in-a-vat and also there is no reason to believe we are in base reality, it means you know that neither of them is true. If there is no reason to believe that I am a fool, it means I know I am not a fool. So the answer is anyway "Yes, I know". — Alkis Piskas
You can trust your perceptions to tell you something about this supposedly virtual reality in which you find yourself. Just like if you are a brain in a skull, you can trust your perceptions to tell you something about the supposedly non-virtual reality in which you find yourself. There is no real difference. A skull is essentially the same thing as a vat: a brain container. — Olivier5
If I were a brain in a skull, the image of a house can only form in my eyes if there really is a house. Looking away (terminating the eye stimuli) has no effect on the house - it still is even when my eyes aren't looking at it. — TheMadFool
If there is no reason to believe that I am a fool, it means I know I am not a fool. — Alkis Piskas
You can dream of a house; you can imagine a house; you can see a picture of a house; so there are ways in which the image of a house can form within a brain in a skull without an actual, real house being there, outside of same skull.
Vice versa, in a well-conceived and coherent virtual reality, houses would not vanish just because you don't look at them. Otherwise, you could tell that something's not quite right. E.g. when you play a video game, villains don't disappear just because you look elsewhere. They are still able to game you over, even if you pay no attention to them. — Olivier5
If there is no reason to believe that I am a fool, it means I know I am not a fool.
— Alkis Piskas — Mww
You must not interpret arguments the way you like, because it looks like you either don't really undestand them or that you avoid admitting that yours are false. And in the process, the discussion becomes a game in semantics.Since when has a mere contingent cognition (belief) justified a certain cognition (knowledge)? — Mww
Still not convinced. Your body is not, actually, the same thing as the way you perceive your body. We have this Kantian incapacity to reach reality as it is, we only see phenomena. In the world out there as theorized by physics, there are no color, only wavelengths. So what you see is NOT what there is, but a representation of it. — Olivier5
No. What's the name for someone that sees no reason to believe there is a god and no reason to believe no god exists? An agnostic. And that doesn't mean an agnostic knows that neither option is true.
As no evidence would prove one way or the other whether we are in reality or an illusion, it's reasonable to be agnostic on the question.
As to your fool analogy. Just because you, the potential fool, see no reason to believe you're a fool, it doesn't mean you know you're not a fool. — Down The Rabbit Hole
But then you claim brain in a vat = brain in a skull — TheMadFool
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