Non sequitur; I neither claimed nor implied as much. Your / solipsist's reliance on logic, however, presupposes others. Read what I actually wrote again. — 180 Proof
As I've pointed out, your argument doesn't even do that. — 180 Proof
The epistemological solipsist says that one cannot know that there are other minds, — Michael
Who is this one ? Is he saying that he cannot know ? Or that's it's the nature (psychological) of other minds that they can't know ? Or that it's irrational or unjustified (normative rationality) for such an other mind to claim to know ? — Pie
How is this any different to saying that knowledge of anything is impossible? — Isaac
The solipsist can argue as if there are other minds, and still claim that he doesn't know that there are other minds. — Michael
It's different in that it doesn't make such a claim? — Michael
'Other minds' has been picked out ss a thing we can't have knowledge of, but the case you're presenting just seems to be a generic case against knowledge of any sort. — Isaac
To which the counter argument would be that you've misunderstood the meaning of the word 'knowledge', since we use it quite felicitously on a daily basis. — Isaac
ES claims that it's irrational to assume that one can be irrational, wrong to assume there's something one can be wrong about (an 'external world' as a target of claims.) — Pie
and if there are other minds then these other minds cannot know that there are other minds. — Michael
I take 'external' to be something or anything other than the subject. — Pie
And isn't this a claim about something beyond him ? The world is such that, if there are other rational minds, then ....
For me the issue is that the claimant wants to bind or makes a normative claim on all possible rational agents, the rational agent as such.
The solipsist can claim to know that he exists, that he is happy, that he sees a tree, that the square root of four is two, that modus ponens is a valid rule of inference, and that knowledge of other minds is impossible. — Michael
Maths and logic are something "other" than the subject, but I don't think it right to think of them as being "external" (in the sense that the material world is said to be external). — Michael
But it starts to get a bit silly, for now we have a subject who 'is' all of mathematics, and the epistemological solipsist is therefore only making claims about him which are himself ? — Pie
Not it doesn't. It says that knowledge of other minds (and an external world) is impossible. — Michael
Maths and logic are something "other" than the subject, but I don't think it right to think of them as being "external" (in the sense that the material world is said to be external). — Michael
That's a false dichotomy. It's not a case of either a) mathematical realism is true or b) I am maths. — Michael
We don't need Platonism. That would be one of those claims that could be right or wrong. It suffices to see that math is normative, that a proof that √2 is irrational is also a proof that all mathematicians as such ought to regard it as such, recognizing a fact about the real number system, independent of any metaphysical theory of something 'behind' this system. — Pie
In what sense, then, are they external ? — Pie
And root 2 is irrational even if I’m the only man alive. It’s even irrational even if nobody is alive. — Michael
It’s “independent” in the sense that we can be wrong when we do maths, but mathematical entities don’t have some “external” existence in the way that atoms or Platonic ideas are said to have. — Michael
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