At what point might Kastrup's answer to materialism be a case of 'mind-at-large of the gaps'?
He rather relies upon the frailties of the former in order to justify his version of latter. I think the first job is easier than the second.
You’re on record as admitting a Schopenhauer-ian bent
He was the champion of the PSR, yet brute facts negate the PSR. It must be that being “metaphysically necessary” is sufficient reason, or the PSR doesn’t apply here.
But why should it be necessary that reality be a universal mind, or manifest from such a thing?
The representation is never the physical stuff, and the mental is sometimes what is represented
How is yours not backwards? Actually, it is backwards, so the real question becomes….how do you justify the backwardness, without merely saying it isn’t?
Why is it not that coming to know the world from two sides isn’t two kinds of knowledge?
a priori as representations of mental events, and a posteriori as representation of physical stuff, but only the latter is coming to know the world.
I’d be happier if it was the case coming to know the world from two conditions, which would be physical stuff and mental events, but not so much that each is a kind of knowledge all by itself without influence from the other
For S it is the will, I thought, but either way…same-o, same-o
I can get on board with the idea that our minds do not exist without bodies because our bodies are extrinsic representaEition of our minds. — Bob Ross
So of course we should expect to a dead body to still have an alive mind — Bob Ross
Firstly, “Either or” entails a dilemma — Bob Ross
the former simply posits that there are physical things within experience — Bob Ross
As I already explained, there is a symmetry breaker. — Bob Ross
I provided an argument and you didn’t really counter it. — Bob Ross
But that research isn’t going to afford us an explanation of what mind is — Bob Ross
If by “embodied” you just mean that your mind corresponds to a physical body — Bob Ross
So of course we should expect to a dead body to still have an alive mind — Bob Ross
You might expect that. I don't expect that. The majority of the medical community does not expect that. The majority of those working in cognitive science do not expect that.
I am aware of the tree that is providing me with shade, but that experience does not mean the tree is within experience, only that my awareness of it is.
I think the stumbling block you're dealing with is the idea that unobserved ceases to exist, like what G E Moore said, when he asked if the train wheels ceased to exist when the passengers were boarded. That is not what Berkeley's idealism is claiming. — Wayfarer
Firstly, under every metaphysical theory, there must be something posited (…) as metaphysical necessary — Bob Ross
Secondly, the idea is that what is expressed in space (and time) is the representation of immaterial ideas (from a previous time): the physical is just an expression of the mental. — Bob Ross
Thirdly, it is not necessary that reality must be a universal mind but, rather, that the universal mind is being posited as metaphysically necessary as a part of what would be claimed as the most parsimonious account of reality. — Bob Ross
”The representation is never the physical stuff, and the mental is sometimes what is represented.”
-Mww
The representation within the physical world is the representation of an immaterial idea. From the side of the physical, it appears as a seemingly potential infinite chain of physical causes; from the side of the mental, it was the expression of will (i.e., of immaterial ideas). — Bob Ross
The point is that we know objects persist — Janus
Rather, we assume they do. If you read my posts more carefully, you would see that I am saying that both the posits of 'existing' or 'non-existing' are mental constructions or surmises. — Wayfarer
you have said there are no immaterial minds - how would you even go about looking for such a mind (I hesitate to say 'phenomenon')? We have physical instruments that can detect electromagnetic and sub-atomic phenomena with exquisite accuracy, but how would you even go about investigating such a question? — Wayfarer
Agreed; I’ll go with the three logical laws of thought.
Hmmm. This looks like it puts representation in the external world, when I want it to be in my head
Is it just the same to say representation of immaterial ideas are what’s expressed in space and time?
And is it representation of immaterial ideas that is expressed by the mental?
So the physical is just mental representation of immaterial ideas.
I consider reality to be that which corresponds to a sensation in general, that, consequently, the conception of which indicates a being.
It follows that there isn’t need for a further account of reality, but there would certainly need to be an account for sensation.
Sensation is how we are awakened to reality, which, of course, thereby presupposes it, be it what it may. No need to account for it.
Sorta like your metaphysical necessity?
What are the other parts of the account of reality.
Both conceptions and ideas are representations, an idea is a conception, but a conception is not necessarily an idea.
But the real problem is expressions of will, which for me belong in moral philosophy alone, which makes this metaphysical nonsense…..….for he who would attribute to will no more than autonomous volition predicated on subjective principles.
Which brings out one of S’s gripes with K….causality, cause and effect. S rejected K’s invocation of freedom as a causality, so without it, for him, will does not stand the relation to cause and effect.
What’s next?
However, since it is provably impossible for explain consciousness under physicalism, — Bob Ross
Actually, he says "zoon politikon" (political animal), yet given his monumental Organon, Aristotle tends to get tagged with that "rational animal" (which I think actually comes from Plato). Anyway, our uniquely distinguishing feature as a species, I think, is that, despite mostly being delusional, we are collaborative knowledge-producers. — 180 Proof
Representation are within our heads: they are perceptions; but, the world one is fundamentally representing is will (i.e., ideas in a universal mind) as opposed to something unknown (for Kant). — Bob Ross
It is obvious that we don't know with absolute certainty that objects persist when unobserved, but all the evidence of human experience, including observation of animal behavior, suggests that they do persist. — Janus
Really all we mean by "persist" is that they are perceptually invariant over varying degrees of time, depending on the object — Janus
they show perceptual commonality for almost all people and even some animals. — Janus
What evidence would that be? We don't observe what we don't observe, so ...
As far as I can tell this is not something we believe on evidence at all, but an assumption. Hume describes it so. — Srap Tasmaner
Of course this is not quite what you mean, but that we infer similar perceptions upon seeing similar behavior. Not saying that's a bad inference, but it's an inference, not an observation. — Srap Tasmaner
So if the couch has changed too little for me to notice or care since I last saw it an hour ago, I'm allowed to pretend it's the same and call it the same. Is that the metaphysics you had in mind? — Srap Tasmaner
the world one is fundamentally representing is will (i.e., ideas in a universal mind) as opposed to something unknown — Bob Ross
I bet there is a lot you will want to respond to in my post (; If not, then there’s plenty Kantian questions I have for you. — Bob Ross
However, since it is provably impossible for explain consciousness under physicalism, — Bob Ross
I wonder if this is a bit dogmatic?
I agree that there is no obvious answer at hand, but thinkers like Metzinger point in certain directions.
But even if all forms of physicalism end up being superseded, this does not make mind-at-large necessary
there might be any number of other explanations we have not yet considered
I wonder about our expertise to make totalising statements on this highly complex and speculative subject. I also wonder about the limitations of human cognition to solve some of the problems we seem to identify.
If everything is a representation in our heads, are our heads also representations...in our heads?
So the deal is, in K-speak, in a human representational system, that which is represented by the system, is not what is is entailed in human knowledge, which is the same as saying that for which the representation stands, is unknown by the system, which just is the human himself. That which is represented in humans is the world, so first and foremost the world itself is that which is unknown by humans.
The fix for that, is to say, in S-speak, even if the world is not known by humans, it is surely known by something not human, whatever it may be. If it happens to be a universal mind, and if Aristotle is still in force, then that universal mind will necessarily know everything about everything, which makes explicit it will know all about the very things humans do not, which the most important would be the world itself.
Long story short, the universal mind has ideas, wills them into worldly object manifestations, complete in themselves, subsequently representable in humans just as completely as the willed idea prescribes in its manifestations. This, of course, logically, makes human knowledge of the ding an sich not only possible, but given. If the universal mind has the idea of it, wills it, then the human system can represent it in himself, and K’s human knowledge limit is exceeded. Which was, given the time and place, the whole raison d’etre for S’s world as will and representation (idea) in the first place.
If close enough, however, it remains to be posited what is gained by such a program, and why it should not be dismissed as a bridge too far.
faults in the universal mind theory must be addressed from a Kantian perspective, insofar as the one is almost directly connected to the other, thus if I can refute it, if the universal mind theory cannot withstand refutation, your questions would be answered thereby.
Our “heads” which we experience phenomenally, in the sense of a physical head of our bodies within our conscious experience, are, under both physicalism and analytic idealism, representations. When you look in the mirror, your head is a representation that your brain (if you are a physicalist) or your mind (if you are an idealist) has of itself. Your brain (or mind) is trying to represent itself to itself when it views itself by producing perceptions of it (just like anything else). — Bob Ross
If the brain is a representation, then the consciousness that seems to reside there, and the self-model that comes with it must also be representations. The question then is what is doing the representing? Perhaps nothing? Or everything? — Janus
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