If the non-mental does interact with the mental however, that raises questions as to how that is even possible. — Ø implies everything
I have not found any proof/argument of how it is impossible for the non-mental to interact with the mental
What are some good arguments for ontological idealism? — Ø implies everything
In order to do math or logic, you would have to be able to see the world through idealist lenses. — T Clark
I would disagree. In order to do classical mathematics or certain types of logic, one has to view it through the lens of Platonic forms (or some other non-mental, non-physical substance). There is no way to experience absolute infinity, for example. We can define it, but to invoke it as an object/property without constructing it, one would have to postulate or imagine some kind of realm in which it exists merely because it was definable. — Ø implies everything
When I say "idealism" I mean philosophies similar to Plato's — T Clark
I find your qualitative/quantitative typology to be a bit imprecise. For example, idealism is often a priority monism (one basic concretum, which is God), but typically not an existence monism (one concretum, i.e. it has no proper parts). Perhaps I am wrong on that, but either way, I'm sure you see the importance in differentiating between priority and existence monism.
I am familiar with the argument from parsimony, and although I find myself somewhat agreeing with it from a pragmatic point of view, I am in the enterprise of creating a theory of absolute certainty. Thus, making ontological assumptions based on pragmatic considerations is not really what I am about.
Furthermore, the argument from parsimony is not an argument for how it is impossible for the mental and non-mental to interact; instead, it is an argument for how it is unlikely and/or how it is most economical to assume they do not, one the basis of the how it is uneconomical to posit/unlikely that the non-mental exists.
In that case, I think we are both in the same boat then: the only valid ontological position in philosophy of mind is in principle agnosticism. — Bob Ross
I do think, however, that epistemological idealism is obtainable by the argument from parsimony. — Bob Ross
When one introspects upon their experience (which is consciousness), they will begin to realize that every object within their experience is wholly reducible to a collection of sensations. — Bob Ross
However, the typical definition of ontological idealism is that it is the view that all of reality consists solely of the mental. — Ø implies everything
I think there's an unstated problem in this description, which is how to grasp 'the mental' as an object of cognition. — Wayfarer
:up:Cogito, ergo sum? No: Cogitatio est, ergo cogitatio est. — Ø implies everything
Cogito, ergo sum? No: Cogitare, ergo cogitare.
— Ø implies everything
:up: — 180 Proof
In some ontologies based on objective idealism, all thinkable, perceivable and feelable objects exist regardless of whether they are the objects of any finite subject's consciousness. — Ø implies everything
In an ontology based on objective idealism, there could be a "place" for its intrinsic nature to exist as well, despite perhaps our fundamental incapacity to mentally access that nature. — Ø implies everything
Can you bring awareness to your awareness itself? Can a subject be its own object? Even if it can, we know from experience that it is not so at all times. — Ø implies everything
However, for this to then be idealism, experience would need to be derivative from experience; if not, then one would not be dealing with a monism, and thus, it would not be idealism. Bernando Kastrup conceptualizes this derivativity as experience being to experiencer what waves are to water. — Ø implies everything
What if it is all an illusion; what if the self is just a construct of thoughts that belong to no-one, but that insist on belonging to someone? Can I not write on a paper, "Hey, I (this paper) am alive!". Perhaps an idealist reality can have objects that falsely proclaim the existence of a self. — Ø implies everything
How about judgement and reason? Is a rational judgement, like a syllogism, reducible to sensations?
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