So would you be more attracted to 'thinking is occurring (as a presupposition), therefore I probably am? — universeness
Many people experience thoughts as someone else's in their heads. This would be enough to doubt the 'I am.' — Tom Storm
The evidence that currently exists which refutes and/or falsifies the claim that "your brain functions separately/independently from mine" is the very words you used. Language bridges the gap between your brains. It connects them. Connected things are neither separate nor independent.
— creativesoul
A computer can act forever, as a stand alone device. A human brain can also function as a completely stand alone device (hermitical human). You can connect computers together in a network by wired or wireless means and allow them to communicate, via language/code. Human brains can also network via language/code, yes. But, networking is optional, and is not evidence that refutes the existence of 'I.' — universeness
Finally, it's not a matter of knowing that we exist (Descartes cogito). It's a brute fact that's not in need of justification. What would it mean to even doubt one's existence? Explaining this would take us into Wittgenstein. — Sam26
It is not a matter of doubting our own existence, but of knowing what we are. the most immediate certainty is that there is thought, sensation, feeling, experience. It does not follow that there is any substantial entity thinking, sensing, feeling, experiencing, — Janus
It does not follow that there is any substantial entity thinking, sensing, feeling, experiencing, — Janus
Kant saw the I as a kind of master thought that is implicit in all the others. — Janus
Isn't this where Kant's theory of transcendental apperception comes in? Which is designated in Kant as the transcendental ego, and was also accepted by Husserl. — Quixodian
It's better to offer your argument and your evidence before you state your conclusive opinions.False analogy. Irrelevant. — creativesoul
Computers are an attempt to simulate/emulate the human brain.Humans are not computers. — creativesoul
It what way? Based on what evidence?Boolean logic is not equivalent to native tongues/common languages. — creativesoul
I stated that networking is optional, not common language acquisition. Don't accuse me of a false analogy I did not make and you just made up.[/quote]Common language acquisition is not optional. So, the comparison is a false analogy on its face. That's enough, really, to dismiss the counter you offered. — creativesoul
So to you, the deaf, dumb and blind kid has no 'I' before they learn to communicate through touch?There is no "I" without common language. — creativesoul
I disagree. If I was placed here at birth and was maintained by a lifeless system until I was able to take care of myself and I never experienced or communicated with another human, in my life, then I think I would still be able to experience an 'I' identity, as different from the flora and non-human fauna around me.There is no common language without shared meaning. There is no shared meaning without a plurality of language users. There is no plurality of users without others. Hence, there is no "I" without others. There is no "I" without a belief system replete with self-identification stemming from common language use. — creativesoul
We agree on that.None of this refutes the existence of "I", — creativesoul
Well, thanks for 'trying to help me, ' in the way you suggested but I think your arguments are incorrect for the reasons I have already given.Rather, this is only meant to help you recognize that the statement "your brain functions separately/independently from mine" is false on its face. It doesn't. It cannot. It's impossible, because you cannot unlearn common language while continually using it. You cannot 'disconnect' all of the meaningful correlations that you've long since drawn between language use and other things, including the use of "I" and yourself. — creativesoul
Again, incorrect, imo, for the reasons I have already given.All this only to say that our brains do not function separately/independently from each other. Language bridges the spatiotemporal gap with shared meaning, shared belief, shared thought, shared understanding. If your brain functioned separately and independently of every other brain, you would not even have the capability to say so. — creativesoul
There are no absolutes; I’m absolutely certain of it. — Mikie
Because you do know stuff. Like which draw your socks are in and what your phone number is and occasionally even where your keys are. It takes training in philosophy to deny this. And even more philosophy to learn otherwise — Banno
There is an absolute.There are no absolutes; I’m absolutely certain of it. — Mikie
Because you do know stuff ... It takes training in philosophy to deny this. — Banno
There are a few ways to not know where your socks are kept. One is pragmatism, in which the location of your sock draw can never be known, but only approximated asymptotically. Such brilliance derives not only from Charles Sander Peirce. — Banno
Why is it so hard to tell the difference between someone who knows where your socks are and someone who thinks they know? — Srap Tasmaner
Ask 'em to get you a pair of your socks; if they succeed, then that'll do, won't it? — Banno
why a theory of how we talk ... is not the same as a theory of how we find our socks. — Srap Tasmaner
Well, no. Knowledge is shown in performance, including linguistic performances. Induction does not seem the right notion to use here.We want to be able to sort people first by what knowledge they have and then test the theory that knowledge is predictive of performance. — Srap Tasmaner
Indeed, and around again, if knowledge is understood only as mental furnishing. Knowledge is enacted.And around we go. — Srap Tasmaner
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