It's trying to talk about stuff about which we cannot talk... — Banno
Reality has an inextricably mental aspect, which itself is never revealed in empirical analysis. — Wayfarer
Nothing could please me more. This seems to be pivotal:I will take issue with this. — Wayfarer
There's your primacy of consciousness.(Wayfarer's argument) is against the common presumption that 'the world makes mind' - that the mind is a product of or output of what are presumed to be the (purely) physical processes that purportedly drive evolution — Wayfarer
why the juxtaposition? — Banno
Or to put it another way the only reality we can imagine and talk about is a relational reality. but it doesn't follow that without humans nothing would exist. — Janus
The demand is that either everything is physical, and mind somehow emerges therefrom; or that everything is mind, and the physical little more than a pattern. What puzzles me is why we feel obligated to phrase the discussion in these terms; why the juxtaposition? — Banno
Ok. I don't see how to respond; I don't see how this relates to what I wrote. — Banno
The demand is that either everything is physical, and mind somehow emerges therefrom; or that everything is mind, and the physical little more than a pattern. What puzzles me is why we feel obligated to phrase the discussion in these terms; why the juxtaposition? — Banno
I’m careful to explain that I’m not claiming that things go into and out of existence depending on whether they’re being perceived, but that, absent an observer, whatever exists is unintelligible and meaningless as a matter of fact and principle. — Wayfarer
Very clear. When there is no observer at a site then none of the derived features of the site brought into play by a human mind exist. — jgill
Physicalism is monistic - it says that there is nothing other than matter-energy. — Wayfarer
I'm not seeing that you did provide any such answer. Sorry. Thanks for trying.You asked, I answered why the juxtoposition. — schopenhauer1
I'm not seeing that you did provide any such answer. Sorry. Thanks for trying. — Banno
When there is no observer at a site then none of the derived features of the site brought into play by a human mind exist. — jgill
If we instead said that physics talks about matter and energy and stuff like that, we wouldn't be surprised to find that physics tells us little about jealousy and democracy and stuff like that. — Banno
Sure. That doesn't mean that the conflict is about anything substantive - so to speak.I do believe that there is a real conflict going on, a contest between the materialist attitude and its challengers. That that is what is behind the 'culture wars'. — Wayfarer
So do we agree that the cup, unobserved in the cupboard, still has a handle? I'm going to take it that we do, that the cup in the cupboard is not the sort of thing that you are talking about as "absent an observer".I’m careful to explain that I’m not claiming that things go into and out of existence depending on whether they’re being perceived, but that, absent an observer, whatever exists is unintelligible and meaningless as a matter of fact and principle. — Wayfarer
Good. I like Mary Midgley's suggestion that they are simply different topics. But I also like Davidson's idea that what's true in one topic, if it can be translated into another, must be true there as well.I'm attempting a philosophical critique of why it doesn't. — Wayfarer
It used to be the red one. But pick any cup you like. — Banno
I like Mary Midgley's suggestion that they are simply different topics. — Banno
Sure.I don't see how it applies. The form of idealist philosophy that I'm advocating does not say that 'the world only exists in your mind'. — Wayfarer
Yet there is *my* mind, *your* mind, and some minds are superior to other minds. This is my focus.I'm referring to the mind - yours, mine, the mind that we as a species and culture share.
I would describe myself as an idealist, but with a concern for the practical everyday implications of idealism.The mind is not an objective reality, it's not a material thing - yet we can't plausibly deny it! That's the elephant in the room, the fly in the ointment, for naturalism.
I was asking how Buddhism overcomes the problem of solipsism. Every epistemic theory worth its salt has to overcome the problem of solipsism somehow, otherwise it falls into it.Besides, I don't think that Buddhist philosophy has a problem with solipsism, because the basis of solipsism is that 'consciousness is mine alone'. What Buddhist would say that?
No. I'm saying that you're trying to do too much with words, that you're trying to do with words even things that can only be done with deeds. (I'll keep bringing this up for a concise formulation.)I contend that it is not possible to make a case this way
— baker
Like I said, you want to uphold the taboo! Push it behind the curtain, declare it out of bounds.
Sure. But there is still "my lived experience" vs. "your lived experience" and the question of which is the right one, or at least superior.Look at the quote in the next post - that more or less re-states everything the essay says. (By the way, thankyou Josh, that passage really hits the nail on the head.)
And I contend that you're trying to do with words what can only be accomplished with physical actions.As I said, we inhabit a pluralistic secular culture which ought not to make such arbitrary exclusions,
How is it not a perspective? (Because of your commitment to to it?)and I believe the Buddhist perspective (which is really not a perspective!)
you're trying to do with words even things that can only be done with deeds
— baker
I don’t really accept that. This is a philosophy forum, and the medium of discourse is writing. — Wayfarer
It's trying to talk about stuff about which we cannot talk... — Banno
If we instead said that physics talks about matter and energy and stuff like that, we wouldn't be surprised to find that physics tells us little about jealousy and democracy and stuff like that. A different area of study, with different concerns. Folk who claim love is nothing but oxytocin don't have much of a grasp of love. — Banno
I'm attempting a philosophical critique of why it doesn't. — Wayfarer
Those with the philosophical mindset, the wonder and desire to know, will inquire as to why it is the case that physics tells us little if anything at all, about things like jealousy and love. — Metaphysician Undercover
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