Instead, they claim that conscious beings and their experiences are the basis on which existence itself lies. — Hello Human
guess my vocabulary needs some update. What’s the difference between the two ? — Hello Human
This idea seems to many as a powerful argument in favor of idealism and against materialism. If the only thing we can be sure of is our own consciousness, would it not make sense to posit that all is nothing but a result of it ?
It seems to me that although this idea is indeed a powerful argument against materialism, the support it provides to idealism is far lesser than the blow it deals to materialism. The fact that the only thing we can be sure of is our own consciousness does not imply that all is based on consciousness.
Nor does it imply that there is no material world. Perhaps there is one, but we cannot ever give evidence that would prove its existence with no room for doubt. — Hello Human
It seems instead to me that materialism is an idea which can never be verified... — Hello Human
That's a classical intuition, and is loosely a statement of realism, not materialism. I personally don't accept this since I prefer the principle of locality (another classical intuition), and it has been shown that they cannot both be true.Most people would agree that there are objects with a location in space and time and exist independently of conscious beings. — Hello Human
Fallacious conclusion on several points, and he wasn't pushing idealism, and it doesn't seem to refute materialism in any way. Materialists also suggest that they both think and exist.René Descartes’ famous quote: “ I think therefore I am”, expresses an idea that is often used to support the idealists’ position: we cannot doubt our existence. — Hello Human
we cannot doubt our (mental) existence. — Hello Human
We can doubt our (physical) existence. — Agent Smith
What do you think ? Is materialism right ? Is idealism right ? Is it some mix of the two ? Can we even settle the question ? Is materialism a good explanation for patterns in different experiences ? — Hello Human
It makes little practical difference to my life which one is true. — Tom Storm
That depends on what "they" meant by "material". — 180 Proof
I believe that materialism still has value. How could have science developed without materialism? It seems instead that materialism is a useful explanation for patterns in conscious experience. — Hello Human
The best explanation for such a situation, it seems to me, is that those two minds exist in a shared world, as it would imply identical or at the very least similar input. For that shared world to be comprehensible by those minds, I believe it would be necessary for it to be structured by space and time. So materialism seems to be the best explanation for the patterns shared by different experiences. — Hello Human
continue to live our lives as if there is one. — Ciceronianus
The dinosaurs were conscious, but they were not philosophers. By their fossils we can know that they existed, independent of us. Independent of human consciousness ever coming into existence on earth. Because we are not imagining the fossils, they are remnants of a former time in the universe. That of course doesn't mean that the universe cannot be a simulation, or another manifestation of a higher consciousness. But we can clearly rule out that any form of human consciousness is a prerequisite for an external world existing, if that is what we mean with anti-materialism (I do not know whether this would correctly be called solipsism, idealism or subjectivism)?It seems instead to me that materialism is an idea which can never be verified, as for it to be verified, it would require proving that there is something existing independently of conscious beings. But do do so, one must step outside of subjective experience. But obviously, that is not possible. You cannot stop being conscious and still experience the world around you. When you stop being conscious, you’re either asleep, knocked out, or dead. — Hello Human
It seems instead to me that materialism is an idea which can never be verified, as for it to be verified, it would require proving that there is something existing independently of conscious beings. But do do so, one must step outside of subjective experience. But obviously, that is not possible. — Hello Human
These questions swirl nebulously around practical debates and they rouse confusion and fury. I think you are right that they are often too big to make sense of. But they are not going to go away easily. — Cuthbert
But this is not enough for philosophy: philosophy wants to get the roots, the total, the ultimate, the general, the universal. The problem is that philosophy gets the ultimate by using the primitive instruments I said before. — Angelo Cannata
What do you think ? Is materialism right ? Is idealism right ? Is it some mix of the two ? Can we even settle the question ? Is materialism a good explanation for patterns in different experiences ? — Hello Human
This is an interesting subject. But why do you have to bring in "-isms", schools of philosophy, etc.?This position is commonly called “materialism”. But for some reason, some people commonly called “idealists”, ... — Hello Human
A man gets lost in the mountains and carves his name on some peak before he dies. A thousand years later his inscription is discovered for the first time. The world has a kind of memory it seems, some kind of 'wax' that holds a pattern in the absence of us and, presumably, all lifeforms. It doesn't matter so much to me whether the scientific image is equated with this metaphorical wax. I just think 'anti-materialists' have to explain the possibility of this lonely inscription. — igjugarjuk
"Materialism" is not a truth-claim – does not consist of truth-claims. It's a speculative criterion or methodological commitment which works better than many alternatives in many cases and doesn't work as well in other cases. "Verification" does not obtain with regard to philosophical suppositions.Materialism, as you say, is impossible to verify. — RogueAI
Insofar as "minds" are enactive metacognitive relations (i.e. tangled hierarchies) within their environments, such questions are incoherent. "Minds" (minding) no more "arises from mindless matter" than walking "arises from" legs or digesting "arises from" guts.And it also leads to a very big unanswered question: how can minds arise from mindless matter?
Isn’t this where Derrida comes in? That is, the concept of writing as the way that a mark that I produce survives me and my intent? — Joshs
My own take is that we can grant that the world as humanly experience is naturally dependent upon the experiencing human. But I don't see how we can leap from this truism to a denial of the world's independent existence, even if I admit that it's difficult indeed to articulate exact 'how' it is supposed to exist in this sense. — igjugarjuk
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