I point out that any attempt to deny it assumes what it would deny. Since I expect objections, I'll stop here. We can get into the details together... — Pie
:up:I think this point has also been made by others here in passing. — Tom Storm
https://www.britannica.com/topic/philosophy-of-common-senseThe philosophy of common sense developed as a reaction against the skepticism of David Hume and the subjective idealism of George Berkeley, both of which seemed to issue from an excessive stress on ideas. This provided what seemed to the common sense philosophers to be a false start leading from fundamental premises to absurdities. This false start stemmed from René Descartes and John Locke inasmuch as they gave to ideas an importance that inevitably made everything else succumb to them.
:up:I've generally held to the presuppositions that I live in a reality that appears to be physical and there are others who share this reality with me who have similar experiences - capacities and vulnerabilities - and ... it make little sense - and there are no advantages - to doubt these presuppositions. — Tom Storm
I'm not quite sure what you mean by this. Are you saying that solipsism assumes other minds, that idealism assumes an external world, that eliminative materialism assumes mental states, etc.? — Michael
What is the claim about ? An otherwise radically unspecified world. — Pie
What is the difference between reckless assertion and an argument ? Conforming to a logic that binds or ought to bind all rational minds. — Pie
t seems to me that everything is up for debate except for there to be something that's up for debate. — Pie
Yes. And that something can be the existence of other minds, or an external material world, or God, or the soul, or mind-independent mathematical entities. — Michael
But if 'external world' means "that which we can be wrong or right about," it's incoherent to reject or doubt it. — Pie
It doesn't make sense for us to use logic (...) to a argue against the (...) force of logic.... — Pie
We need to go back to the absolutely minimal notion of whatever there is to make correct or incorrect statements about. — Pie
I claim that the minimum rational intelligible epistemic situation is a plurality of persons subject to the same logic — Pie
Affirming cogito, while not doing much to “fix” it. — Mww
More cart-before-the-horse metaphysics..... — Mww
I'm trying to dig to the gist of the appearance / reality distinction, which seems tied in to the concept of the self. — Pie
So epistemological solipsists say that we might be wrong to think that we could be wrong ? We can't be sure about whether there's something we can be wrong about. — Pie
They just claim that we can't know that there are other minds — Michael
nothing about saying that only one's mind and mental phenomena exists entails that no claims are truth-apt. — Michael
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