For an idealist this is a tautology, or self-evident. It can't be disproven from second order logic. (to be is to be perceived)To be perceived is to exist is false. — TheMadFool
But didn't you agree that dreams are immaterial? Are they not perceptions?, off the top of my head I can say, to be material is to be perceived. That means, — TheMadFool
....we must be able to employ persuasion, just as strict reasoning can be employed,
on opposite sides of a question, not in order that we may in practice employ it in both ways (for we must not make people believe what is wrong), but in order that we may see clearly what the facts are.... — Aristotle
(for we must not make people believe what is wrong) — Aristotle
To be perceived is to exist is false.
— TheMadFool
For an idealist this is a tautology, or self-evident. It can't be disproven from second order logic. (to be is to be perceived) — Yohan
But didn't you agree that dreams are immaterial? Are they not perceptions?
For an idealist dream matter and non-dream matter are both ultimately immaterial, that is, mental. Material is a perception, but perception isn't material. — Yohan
You are equating existence and materiality. I only said dream objects are immaterial. I didn't say dream objects don't exist.In other words, if perceived then either exists (like a stone) or doesn't exist (like a dream/hallucination). — TheMadFool
To exist is to be perceived means if it's perceived, it exists. Where are you getting "or doesn't exist from"?There's nothing to disprove since the consequent is a tautology (exists or doesn't exist) — TheMadFool
For an idealist existence=perception. Therefore, if perceived, exists. If not perceived, non-existent.As I said, the idealist, through perception (percieved or not perceived) alone can't tell the difference between existent things, nonexistent things, and immaterial things. — TheMadFool
You are equating existence and materiality. I only said dream objects are immaterial. I didn't say dream objects don't exist. — Yohan
To exist is to be perceived means if it's perceived, it exists. Where are you getting "or doesn't exist from"? — Yohan
I focus more on clarity than adding substance. The latter is hard to do if I believe the argument is lacking in substance. — Yohan
Of course as a materialist you believe that.They are the same thing. That was my point! — TheMadFool
Esse est percipii — George Berkeley (father of idealism)
To me I can't imagine a quality without consciousness, consciousness seems fundamental to all qualities. — Yohan
I agree with that. I'm supposing that the roundness of the cup is not itself conscious of anything. — Cuthbert
What is the definition of 'is material'? — TonesInDeepFreeze
moderate-sized specimens of dry goods — Austin
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