You, in that world, might not know, in that world, that all that exists is your mind — Isaac
In such a world I don't know the square root of two, I don't know what I would have seen had I chosen a different course of action, I don't know what I will feel tomorrow, etc. — Michael
Well. I'm sold. Super convincing argument. Well done. Have you considered a career in politics? — Isaac
You, in that world, might not know, in that world, that all that exists is your mind — Isaac
I could say the same about your bare assertion that the square root of 2 and my future feelings would be directly available to my mind. — Michael
because it's available directly to your conscious mind...
There can be no source of uncertainty other than from some state external to the system carrying out the inference. — Isaac
There can be no source of uncertainty other than from some state external to the system carrying out the inference. — Isaac
My argument is about the version of us doing the assessment about the feasibility of those possible worlds. — Isaac
The square root of two is mind-independent even if only my mind exists. — Michael
you admitted that if only X's mind exists then X doesn't know that only his mind exists. I don't know what else I can tell you; you just admitted to epistemological solipsism. — Michael
No, because the epistemic solipsists can further analyse what it would mean for X (that even if X didn't know they know, they would, in fact, know) and thereby need to reject the option. Having found they need to reject the option, they cannot coherently claim to also not know if it's true. — Isaac
1. if Y exists then X knows that Y exists
2. X knows that if Y exists then X knows that Y exists
1 does not entail 2. — Michael
5. Z then has to admit that in that possible world X cannot be wrong about what is the case (whether X knows this or not is irrelevant) — Isaac
I am open to criticism, but any criticism will be parsed through my own critical filter and accepted or rejected depending on how I judge its plausibility. — Janus
"The internal"; my thoughts, feelings and bodily sensations are what is most immediately present to me. Your thoughts, feelings and sensations are present to me only insofar as they can be conveyed by what you say about them: if you are being honest. If you are lying or hiding your thoughts and feelings then I may have no idea; unless I feel your actions are giving you away, and I could be wrong about that. None of this has anything to do with Descartes. — Janus
Subjectivism is a label used to denote the philosophical tenet that "our own mental activity is the only unquestionable fact of our experience." The success of this position is historically attributed to Descartes and his methodic doubt.
https://www.bu.edu/wcp/Papers/Cont/ContCuce.htmDescartes stands at the beginning of modern philosophy and Heidegger accepts Descartes' role in the history of metaphysics. Descartes is the first thinker who discovers the "cogito sum" as an indubitable and the most certain foundation and thereby liberates philosophy from theology. He is the first subjectivistic thinker in the modern philosophy and he grounds his subjectivity on his epistemology.
The orientation of the philosophical problems with Descartes starts from the "ego" (the "subject") because in the modern philosophy the "subject" is given to the knower first and as the only certain thing, i.e., the only "subject" is accessible immediately and certainly. For Descartes, the "subject" (the "ego", the "I", "res cogitans") is something that thinks, i.e., something that represents, perceives, judges, agrees, disagrees, loves, hates, strives, and likes. "Descartes calls all these modes of behavior cogitationes." (1) Therefore, "ego" is something that has these cogitationes. However, the cogitationes always belongs to the "I", I judge, I represent, etc. Heidegger maintains that Descartes' definition of "res cogitans" says to us that "res cogitans" is a res whose realities are representations.
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Starting with Descartes, the subject becomes the center, and the subject, as the first true being, has priority over all other beings. Contrary to this priority of the subject, Heidegger's goal is to show that there is no subject distinct from the external world of things, because Dasein is essentially Being-in-the-world. Therefore, Heidegger puts together the separation of the subject and the object by the concept of "Dasein" which is essentially a Being-in-the-world. However, Being-in-the-world does not mean that it is like a piece of chalk in the chalk box. Being-in, as the most essential and existential characteristics of Dasein, signifies the expression of such terms as "dwelling," "being familiar with," and "being present to."
The distinction between the subject and the object makes the possibility of the distinction between the knower and what he knows.
"The internal"; my thoughts, feelings and bodily sensations are what is most immediately present to me. ... None of this has anything to do with Descartes. — Janus
Descartes famously emphasized that subjective reality is better known than objective reality, but knowledge of the objective reality of one’s own existence as a non-physical thinking thing is nearly as basic, or perhaps as basic, as one’s knowledge of the subjective reality of one’s own thinking. For Descartes, knowledge seems to start with immediate, indubitable knowledge of one’s subjective states and proceeds to knowledge of one’s objective existence as a thinking thing. Cogito, ergo sum (usually translated as “I think, therefore I am”) expresses this knowledge. All knowledge of realities other than oneself ultimately rests on this immediate knowledge of one’s own existence as a thinking thing.
Now that I have convinced myself that there is nothing in the world – no sky, no earth, no minds, no bodies – does it follow that I don’t exist either? No it does not follow; for if I convinced myself of something then I certainly existed.
But there is a supremely powerful and cunning deceiver who deliberately deceives me all the time! Even then, if he is deceiving me I undoubtedly exist: let him deceive me all he can, he will never bring it about that I am nothing while I think I am something. So after thoroughly thinking the matter through I conclude that this proposition, I am, I exist, must be true whenever I assert it or think it.
But this ‘I’ that must exist – I still don’t properly understand what it is; so I am at risk of confusing it with something else, thereby falling into error in the very item of knowledge that I maintain is the most certain and obvious of all. To get straight about what this ‘I’ is, I shall go back and think some more about what I believed myself to be before I started this meditation.
Well, then, what did I think I was? A man. But what is a man? Shall I say ‘a rational animal'? No; for then I should have to ask what an animal is, and what rationality is – each question would lead me on to other still harder ones, and this would take more time than I can spare.
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Since now I am pretending that I don’t have a body, these are mere fictions. Sense-perception? One needs a body in order to perceive; and, besides, when dreaming I have seemed to perceive through the senses many things that I later realized I had not perceived in that way.
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Thinking? At last I have discovered it – thought! This is the one thing that can’t be separated from me. I am, I exist – that is certain. But for how long? For as long as I am thinking. But perhaps no longer than that; for it might be that if I stopped thinking I would stop existing; and I have to treat that possibility as though it were actual, because my present policy is to reject everything that isn’t necessarily true. Strictly speaking, then, I am simply a thing that thinks – a mind, or intelligence, or intellect, or reason, these being words whose meaning I have only just come to know. Still, I am a real, existing thing. What kind of a thing? I have answered that: a thinking thing.
Well, then, what am I? A thing that thinks. What is that? A thing that doubts, understands, affirms, denies, wants, refuses, and also imagines and senses.
Isn’t it one and the same ‘I’ who now doubts almost everything, understands some things, affirms this one thing – namely, that I exist and think, denies everything else, wants to know more, refuses to be deceived, imagines many things involuntarily, and is aware of others that seem to come from the senses? Isn’t all this just as true as the fact that I exist, even if I am in a perpetual dream, and even if my creator is doing his best to deceive me? These activities are all aspects of my thinking, and are all inseparable from myself. The fact that it is I who doubt and understand and want is so obvious that I can’t see how to make it any clearer. But the ‘I’ who imagines is also this same ‘I’. For even if (as I am pretending) none of the things that I imagine really exist, I really do imagine them, and this is part of my thinking. Lastly, it is also this same ‘I’ who senses, or is aware of bodily things seemingly through the senses. Because I may be dreaming, I can’t say for sure that I now see the flames, hear the wood crackling, and feel the heat of the fire; but I certainly seem to see, to hear, and to be warmed. This cannot be false; what is called ‘sensing’ is strictly just this seeming, and when ‘sensing’ is understood in this restricted sense of the word it too is simply thinking. — Descartes
https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/feuerbach/works/future/future0.htmTaken as an intelligible (geistig) or an abstract being, that is, regarded neither as human nor as sensuous, but rather as one that is an object for and accessible only to reason or intelligence, God qua God is nothing but the essence of reason itself. But, basing themselves rather on imagination, ordinary theology and Theism regard him as an independent being existing separately from reason. Under these circumstances, it is an inner, a sacred necessity that the essence of reason as distinguished from reason itself be at last identified with it and the divine being thus be apprehended, realised, as the essence of reason. It is on this necessity that the great historical significance of speculative philosophy rests. The proof of the proposition that the divine essence is the essence of reason or intelligence lies in the fact that the determinations or qualities of God, in so far as they are rational or intelligible and not determinations of sensuousness or imagination, are, in fact, qualities of reason.
“God is the infinite being or the being without any limitations whatsoever.” But what cannot be a limit or boundary on God can also not be a limit or boundary on reason. If, for example, God is elevated above all limitations of sensuousness, so, too, is reason. He who cannot conceive of any entity except as sensuous, that is, he whose reason is limited by sensuousness, can only have a God who is limited by sensuousness. Reason, which conceives God as an infinite being, conceives, in point of fact, its own infinity in God. What is divine to reason is also truly rational to it, or in other words, it is a being that perfectly corresponds to and satisfies it. That, however, in which a being finds satisfaction, is nothing but the being in which it encounters itself as its own object. He who finds satisfaction in a philosopher is himself of a philosophical nature. That he is of this nature is precisely what he and others encounter in this satisfaction. Reason “does not, however, pause at the finite, sensuous things; it finds satisfaction in the infinite being alone” – that is to say, the essence of reason is disclosed to us primarily in the infinite being.
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The necessary being is one that it is necessary to think of, that must be affirmed absolutely and which it is simply impossible to deny or annul, but only to the extent to which it is a thinking being itself. Thus, it is its own necessity and reality which reason demonstrates in the necessary being. — Feuerbach
God's non-existence, the Reimann hypothesis, and being happy tomorrow aren't one of the Ys defined in 1 and assumed to exist in 2 (what would it even mean to say that God's non-existence exists?). — Michael
2. if Y exists then X knows all properties of Y (a consequence of all Ys being in X's mind) — Isaac
what would it even mean to say that God's non-existence exists?
You can't go from:
1. If Y exists then X knows that Y exists
to:
2. If Y does not exist then X knows that Y does not exist — Michael
1. render all that is the case as the set {Y,Y,Y,Y....} for all Ys
2. if Y exists then X knows all properties of Y (a consequence of all Ys being in X's mind)
3. X therefore cannot ever be wrong about what is the case (since what is the case is entirely constituted of all the Ys)
4. Z (our epistemic solipsist) entertains a possible world in which 2 is true.
5. Z then has to admit that in that possible world X cannot be wrong about what is the case (whether X knows this or not is irrelevant)
6. no X is ever in a situation where they cannot be wrong about what is the case.
5 and 6 are a contradiction. Z has to either reject 5 or reject 6.
Maintaining 6, Z rejects 5.
If Z rejects 5, they cannot also coherently claim scepticism about whether 5 is the case or not. — Isaac
Seeing as I haven't, I'm not sure why you're mentioning this. — Isaac
these are all invalid inferences. — Michael
Just saying it over and over is pointless. You're not my teacher. We're equals here, having a discussion (or supposed to be). I've tried to explain why I think they are valid inferences. I've even referenced that explanation twice now. You've not even acknowledged it, let alone addressed it. If you're just here to lecture me I'm not interested. — Isaac
You're saying that if ontological solipsism is true then I know that God doesn't exist. — Michael
1. render all that is the case as the set {Y,Y,Y,Y....} for all Ys
2. if Y exists then X knows all properties of Y (a consequence of all Ys being in X's mind)
3. X therefore cannot ever be wrong about what is the case (since what is the case is entirely constituted of all the Ys)
4. Z (our epistemic solipsist) entertains a possible world in which 2 is true.
5. Z then has to admit that in that possible world X cannot be wrong about what is the case (whether X knows this or not is irrelevant)
6. no X is ever in a situation where they cannot be wrong about what is the case.
5 and 6 are a contradiction. Z has to either reject 5 or reject 6.
Maintaining 6, Z rejects 5.
If Z rejects 5, they cannot also coherently claim scepticism about whether 5 is the case or not. — Isaac
You're saying that if ontological solipsism is true then I know that God doesn't exist. — Michael
No. — Isaac
Given 1 and 2 it just refers to what exists — Michael
No, I specifically included the properties of what exists. And I've been through all this. You even asked me what it would mean and I replied that I consider God's nonexistence to be a property of the world (which exists). It is such that there's no thing in it matching the description of god. You ignored my reply completely and are now acting as if I hadn't said anything on the matter. — Isaac
It is such that there's no thing in it matching the description of god.
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