Consider though : their claim is about other minds. Other minds can't know whether there are other minds. The keyword is we. — Pie
es. What's wrong with that? — Michael
We can try to repair this: "If there are other minds, then those minds can't know there are other minds." But this is a statement about the very minds that might not exist. — Pie
And? If there is the Christian God then he is a dick. The statement is about the very God that might not exist. What's the problem? The existence of something is entailed by there being some true claim about it. — Michael
To me that's a misleading analogy. If I claim there is a God, I'm saying that for both us there is a God. It's a fact about our world in common that there's a God in it.
If I say, on the other hand, that it's a fact about our world together that we might not have a world together, that's different. — Pie
To-day, then, since I have opportunely freed my mind from all cares and am happily disturbed by no passions, and since I am in the secure possession of leisure in a peaceable retirement, I will at length apply myself earnestly and freely to the general overthrow of all my former opinions. [Meditations, 1.1]
He who lived well hid himself well.
1) The things we see are not present in the mind. What we see are representations. The problem of judgment arises because we cannot compare these representations to the things themselves in order to determine whether the representation is true to what it represents. — Fooloso4
It's not 'I think' but 'we think.' — Pie
Unless of course it's not just babble...and you appeal to a reason or logic that binds us both... — Pie
....the assumption that the external world, the one beyond 'my' experience, is merely a more or less reasonable hypothesis. — Pie
....that ol’ Rene intended it to be understood cogito relates to individuals, even if speaking in general regarding all individuals. So...it is “I think”, not “we think”. You know.....philosophizing in an orderly way.
———- — Mww
Philosophizing in an orderly way reduces our minimal epistemic commitment to.....granting that for which the negation is impossible. Which, ironically enough, gets us right back to Descartes’ philosophy that everybody hates. — Mww
My states of mind, my thoughts and sensations, are phosphorescently present for me, infinitely intimate. I can no more be wrong about what I mean by a word or how I see a patch of color than 2 + 2 can equal 5. And so on. — Pie
He said that Schopenhauer carried on Kant's examination of the unknowable thing-in-itself, nomena. — T Clark
Ideas are among the most important items in Descartes’ philosophy. They serve to unify his ontology and epistemology. As he says in a letter to Guillaume Gibieuf (1583–1650), dated 19 January 1642, “I am certain that I can have no knowledge of what is outside me except by means of the ideas I have within me.”
I seem to see other people, but I can't be sure, because what I mean by person is roughly what I mean by 'I,' this existence I know 'directly.' My states of mind, my thoughts and sensations, are phosphorescently present for me, infinitely intimate. — Pie
The act of knowing is not a private matter, which is what this quote implies. — Sam26
But then it's just a contingent fact that other minds don't exist. We're not in the original situation of worrying about apparent minds that might be p-zombie or fantasies. — Pie
I'm guessing that some people imagine the solipsist as living in a world like ours that 'may' be just his fantasy... — Pie
... and they imagine him (problematically, in my view ) being able to make claims that are wrong or right about this fantasy world.
As a categorical statement, the conclusion does not follow from the antecedent hypotheticals.It is possible that the number of minds is finite and it is possible that every mind is mortal. It is possible that every mind except one dies. Therefore it is possible that only one mind exists. — Michael
Circular fiat. :roll:Nothing about this scenario is incoherent, therefore the solipsist’s claim that only one mind exists is coherent.
Without all of the premises being true, your argument is not a sound one, sir. And, as pointed out, even (your) reliance on logic – normative rationality – presupposes selves-other-than-yourself (i.e. discursive community), which shows that your apologia, like "the solipsist's claim" itself (as well as Descartes' "Cogito"), is a performative contradiction.The coherency of the conclusion doesn’t depend on any of the premises being (or having been) true.
Without all of the premises being true, your argument is not a sound one, sir. — 180 Proof
And, as pointed out, even (your) reliance on logic – normative rationality – presupposes selves-other-than-yourself — 180 Proof
As I've pointed out, your argument doesn't even do that.It's not supposed to be a sound argument. It's supposed to show that the claim "only one mind exists" is coherent. — Michael
Non sequitur; I neither claimed nor implied as much. Your / solipsist's reliance on logic, however, presupposes others. Read what I actually wrote again.Classical logic (and others) doesn't depend on there being other people.
I claim that the minimum rational intelligible epistemic situation is a plurality of persons subject to the same logic and together in a world that they can be right or wrong about. — Pie
Your view is so close to mine. Do you not see that ? — Pie
the claim that just one mind exists (or that only one mind can be known to exist) is coherent, contrary to your objection. — Michael
I don't know why you think it would be a fantasy. Experiences are real, not made up. — Michael
I can be right or wrong about the world all by myself, thank you very much. — Mww
ven if I'm the last (or first) man alive, the various axioms and rules of inference hold. The law of noncontradiction doesn't just fade away in a nuclear holocaust where I'm the only survivor. — Michael
My primary point is that epistemological solipsism is incoherent as a claim about other minds in general, namely that they ought not just assume that such other minds exist. — Pie
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