Even if X is a property of something that exists in my mind it doesn't follow that I know that it will cause Y. You're just asserting that the solipsist will have knowledge of the future without explaining how you came to that conclusion. — Michael
it isn't a given that ontological solipsism entails hard determinism. It could be that probabilities/randomness is involved in mental phenomena. — Michael
Same with this. It doesn't follow from X being a property of something that exists in my mind that I know that it cannot lead to Y. — Michael
You don't find the decimal notation of pi, or the truth of the Reimann hypothesis, written onto atoms or whatever, or on sense data, and mathematical realism is false. — Michael
They'd be wrong.
1. John knows that Joe Biden is President
2. Joe Biden is 79 years old
3. Therefore, John knows that Joe Biden is 79 years old
Obviously the conclusion doesn't follow. The same with:
1. John knows that X, Y, and Z exist
2. Only X, Y, and Z exist
3. Therefore, John knows that only X, Y, and Z exist
The conclusion doesn't follow. — Michael
'All things it will cause' is a property of an entity. — Isaac
1. John knows that Joe Biden is President (and Joe Biden is a figment of John's mind)
2. Joe Biden is 79 years old (and being 79 years old is a figment of John's mind)
3. Therefore, John knows that Joe Biden is 79 years old (and 'knowing' anything is figment of John's mind, the 'truth' of anything means whatever john thinks is means because it's also a figment of John's mind) — Isaac
2. If John claims "Only X, Y, and Z exist" - John cannot possibly be wrong — Isaac
John knows that only X, Y, and Z exist (incorrect) — Isaac
Jim knows such a world where John might exist is nonsense. — Isaac
I wouldn’t say that that the vase will fall off the table tomorrow and break is a property of the vase, or of the table, or of the floor, or of whatever. — Michael
it is possible for me to not know that I have been in pain for 30 minutes. And this is true even if only my mental phenomena exists. I don't need for something other than my mind (e.g. another mind or a material universe) to exist for me to have been in pain for 30 minutes, or for me to not know that I have been in pain for 30 minutes. — Michael
He can possibly be wrong. I provided the argument several times:
Bp
¬□p
Bp ∧ ◇¬p — Michael
Only X, Y, and Z exist and they are all features of John's mind. He knows that X, Y, and Z exist but he doesn't know that only X, Y, and Z exist. He doesn't know what will exist in the future, or how X, Y, or Z will change. He might not know what existed in the past, given the limitations of memory. He might not know whether or not the Reimann hypothesis is true. He doesn't know what could have happened had he chosen a different course of action. — Michael
That's ignoring the implication of the entire world being in John's mind. — Isaac
I don't see how. What you say is true in our world because timekeeping is external and your memory is not always accessible to you. Two external features. I don't see how it would be the case in a world where all there was was your consciously aware mind. — Isaac
Then why did the vase fall off the table, if not because of some property of the world prior? — Isaac
You can only avoid the conclusion by rejecting one of the two premises. Either I don’t believe that ontological solipsism is true or ontological solipsism is necessarily true. — Michael
Let’s assume that only my mind and your mind exist. I have been in pain for 30 minutes. — Michael
I don’t understand what’s difficult to understand about this. Stuff that will happen in the future isn’t a “property” of things that exist in the present. — Michael
If only a material universe of superstrings exist it doesn’t follow that the future state of that universe is a property of that universe in the present. — Michael
Nonsense. You writing only two premises doesn't confer some kind of magical power. You've not listed all the premises which are being assumed by the argument. — Isaac
1. I think. — Isaac
2. If John claims "Only X, Y, and Z exist" - John cannot possibly be wrong — Isaac
He can possibly be wrong. I provided the argument several times:
Bp
¬□p
Bp ∧ ◇¬p
What you should say is:
2. If John claims "Only X, Y, and Z exist" - John is not wrong
All you have argued is that if ontological solipsism is correct then the ontological solipsist isn't wrong. — Michael
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