Deleted User
praxis
Idealism: Other minds exist! — Agent Smith
Solipsism: Other minds don't exist! — Agent Smith
DingoJones
Art48
Gnomon
A direct & succinct answer to the OP.Idealism: Other minds exist!
Solipsism: Other minds don't exist! — Agent Smith
180 Proof
By idealism I understand 'only minds and ideas (or what we is known) are real.' Ontology reduced to epistemology. (Related to 'antirealism', 'essentialism' (e.g. universals), immaterialism / nonphysicalism / supernaturalism, 'social constructionism', 'common sensism', 'moral subjectivism / relativism / nihilism', ''finalism', 'existentialism', metaphysical libertarianism, etc.)
By solipsism I understand 'only my mind and my ideas (or what I know) are real.' Ontology without epistemology. (Reductio ad absurdum of idealism)
Manuel
Agent Smith
Agent Smith
A direct & succinct answer to the OP.
However, both are unprovable inferences from Descartes' intuitive introspective "I am" argument. From that axiom, we can a> optimistically reason that similar minds exist in the bodies of our fellow philosophers. Or, we can b> pessimistically conclude that nothing exists apart from my own inner world model.
Both can be argued for or against, but not proven empirically. Yet, according to b>, even empirical evidence could be a product of my own world-modeling mind. We know both possibilities, only by reading our own minds.
From personal experience though, my own intuition is not smart enough to make-up all the observed complexities of reality. So, I have to assume that those counter-intuitive ideas & opinions are coming from external minds with different life experiences. :cool: — Gnomon
praxis
Idealism and solipsism are derived from the simple fact that a world external to mind or self respectively can't be known to exist. As you can see, these philosophical stances are predicated on possibility (metaphysics) and agnoiological (epistemological) concerns. — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
Prove it. — praxis
praxis
Agent Smith
They are representations. My mind models a representation of you, for instance. — praxis
praxis
Tom Storm
If you were a figment of my imagination I would know more about you then you do. — praxis
Deleted User
Tom Storm
I get that - except isn't idealism a la berkeley predicated on the idea that all things disappear when we're not experiencing them first hand.
The tree in the forest - and me - and you? — GLEN willows
Agent Smith
If you were a figment of my imagination I would know more about you then you do. Do you think that I know more about you then you do? I don’t know the color of the shirt you’re currently wearing, assuming you’re wearing one. You most likely do. — praxis
Agent Smith
I get that - except isn't idealism a la berkeley predicated on the idea that all things disappear when we're not experiencing them first hand.
The tree in the forest - and me - and you?
In other words, the entire sense-excperience I'm having is in my head. Only my head. That's solipsism no? — GLEN willows
Deleted User
Pie
So what's a skeptical atheist to do? I agree with Agent Smith that solipsism is impossible to disprove, but I notice it gets short shrift in philosophical circles. It seems like the "dead end" everyone is trying to avoid (Descartes only proved one mind / thinking thing....then ran to God for the rest.).
My point is - Solipsism is never treated as a legitimate theory compared to Empiricism or Idealism... — GLEN willows
Banno
Pie
Pie
As far as I can tell, idealism is either difficult or impossible to disprove. The same goes for solipsism. — Agent Smith
Pie
...Idealism often has to make use of some kind of 'big mind' to prevent solipsism...
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From Kastrup's blog:
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I also do not deny that reality exists independent of personal psyches, like the human psyche. I maintain that empirical reality is an experience of an impersonal mind, which I like to call 'mind-at-large' in honor of Aldous Huxley. — Tom Storm
180 Proof
"Skeptical" of what? (Atheism?)So what's a skeptical atheist to do? — GLEN willows
:up:All solipsism is a form of idealism, idealism need not be solipsist at all. — Manuel
:fire:Idealism holds that for a statement to be true it must stand in some relation to mind - observed, known, believed, or whatever. So is "There are other minds" true for idealism? If it is true, then it stands in some relation to mind... but which one? If it stands in a relation to a mind other than one's own, then that is profoundly problematic for idealism. Hence the need for god to hold things together.
Idealism's relation to truth is... incoherent. — Banno
Tom Storm
For context, I don't feel strongly about 'matter' and the 'physical' either when used metaphysically or 'transpractically.' Perhaps I'm missing out. Too late now. — Pie
Pie
A perfect illusion of a material world which can't really be transcended except perhaps via glimmers during meditation, or perhaps at 'death', is functionally no different to an actual material world. — Tom Storm
praxis
Nothing is fully imagined or understood in dreams, let along in a potential solipsistic universe. — Tom Storm
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