We cannot imagine anything that we have not already experienced in the past. — Samuel Lacrampe
Whatever unanalyzable element sui generis seems to be in nature, although it be not really where it seems to be, yet must really be in nature somewhere, since nothing else could have produced even the false appearance of such an element sui generis. For example, I may be in a dream at this moment, and while I think I am talking and you are trying to listen, I may all the time be snugly tucked up in bed and sound asleep. Yes, that may be; but still the very semblance of my feeling a reaction against my will and against my senses, suffices to prove that there really is, though not in this dream, yet somewhere, a reaction between the inward and outward worlds of my life.
In the same way, the very fact that there seems to be Thirdness in the world, even though it be not where it seems to be, proves that real Thirdness there must somewhere be. If the continuity of our inward and outward sense be not real, still it proves that continuity there really be, for how else should sense have the power of creating it? — Reasoning and the Logic of Things, pp. 161-162
I may have used the wrong term. Nevertheless, I argue against the concept that I have defined, even if the term is the wrong one. — Samuel Lacrampe
We cannot imagine anything that we have not already experienced in the past. EG: a man that is born blind cannot imagine the concept of a colour. — Samuel Lacrampe
I don't know how you define the spiritual (or the physical) so it's kinda hard to comment. — Michael
Spiritual: all that exists which is not physical. EG: living beings such as angels and souls, but also non-living beings such as logic and morality. — Samuel Lacrampe
I would disagree. The blind can understand the theory behind the colour blue, that is, a certain frequency range of light wave, but he could not "see" the colour blue in his mind.As long as the blind share our background capacities and language there is little that prevents them from understanding descriptions of colours and imagining what colours are like. — jkop
Actually it depends on our ability to imagine physical things. Because if we cannot imagine physical things prior to experiencing them, then how can we explain our perception of physical things if these things don't exist anywhere? If we cannot provide an adequate alternative explanation for that phenomenon, then we must conclude that physical things exist.But whence the assumption that the question whether the world is physical or non-physical would somehow depend on our ability to imagine non-physical things? It doesn't. — jkop
When we entertain, therefore, any suspicion that a philosophical term is employed without any meaning or idea (as it is but too frequent), we need but enquire, from what impression is that supposed idea derived? And if it be impossible to assign any, this will serve to confirm our suspicion. — Hume
Physical: matter and energy. — Samuel Lacrampe
I do believe in these things, but I see your general point. The concept of "angels" can be deconstructed into "living beings" and "spiritual", both of which we perceive elsewhere. As for the soul, I think we do not have a clear perception of it. As such, I would not use my argument to prove the existence of these two concepts.Well, as a possible reductio ad absurdum of your reasoning (unless you accept the conclusion), given that we can imagine such things as angels and souls, it must then follow that such things exist? — Michael
As for the soul, I think we do not have a clear perception of it. As such, I would not use my argument to prove the existence of these two concepts. — Samuel Lacrampe
I agree with this. But these concepts (colours and shapes and sounds and textures and other sensory qualities) are physical concepts, not spiritual ones. How can the extreme spiritualist explain where these come from, if not from a physical world?The extreme spiritualist could argue that when we imagine things like chairs and tables we're imagining complex arrangements of the latter things, not the former. — Michael
But these concepts (colours and shapes and sounds and textures and other sensory qualities) are physical concepts, not spiritual ones. How can the extreme spiritualist explain where these come from, if not from a physical world? — Samuel Lacrampe
We do not experience "physical", but "blue", which is a physical concept. As long as you have experienced "blue", you need to explain where this experience comes from, if not from a physical world.You seem to be assuming that "physical" is a simple impression, like "blue", but that is doubtful. I have certainly experienced "blue", but how do I know whether I have experienced "physical"? — Sapientia
Physical: matter and energy. — Samuel Lacrampe
How can that be? Spiritual things such as angels, souls, logic and morality do not possess such things as colours and shapes and sounds and textures and other sensory qualities. Can you find a spiritual thing that does?So they'll say that these are spiritual concepts, not physical concepts. — Michael
How can that be? Spiritual things such as angels, souls, logic and morality do not possess such things as colours and shapes and sounds and textures and other sensory qualities. Can you find a spiritual thing that does? — Samuel Lacrampe
We do not experience "physical", but "blue", which is a physical concept. — Samuel Lacrampe
As long as you have experienced "blue", you need to explain where this experience comes from, if not from a physical world. — Samuel Lacrampe
The only existences, of which we are certain, are perceptions, which immediately present to us by consciousness, command our strongest assent, and are the first foundation of all our conclusions. — Hume
Does this mean that, to a spiritualist, a tree (even imaginary) is a spiritual thing, not a physical one? If so, then how does he differentiate between physical and spiritual things?Well, a tree. Your reasoning rests on the premise that when we imagine a tree we're imagining a physical thing. But a spiritualist might reject this premise and say that when we imagine a tree we imagine a spiritual thing (or some other non-physical thing). — Michael
The blind can understand the theory behind the colour blue, that is, a certain frequency range of light wave, but he could not "see" the colour blue in his mind. — Samuel Lacrampe
Actually it depends on our ability to imagine physical things. Because if we cannot imagine physical things prior to experiencing them, then how can we explain our perception of physical things if these things don't exist anywhere? If we cannot provide an adequate alternative explanation for that phenomenon, then we must conclude that physical things exist. — Samuel Lacrampe
Does this mean that, to a spiritualist, a tree (even imaginary) is a spiritual thing, not a physical one? If so, then how does he differentiate between physical and spiritual things? — Samuel Lacrampe
What does "seeing" mean when nothing is seen? — jkop
As long as you have experienced "blue", you need to explain where this experience comes from, if not from a physical world. — Samuel Lacrampe
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