But it's a faith, not something supported by empirical evidence. — Michael
As if basing one's beliefs on empirical evidence were not an act of faith... If you are a Boltzmann brain, what are the chances of your having just happened to have imagined into being a world that exactly corresponds to the actual world? You happened to drop into existence in a way that allows you to realise you are a Boltzmann brain... — Banno
The argument is valid:
1. There are far more long-lived Boltzmann brains than long-lived humans
2. I am long-lived
3. Therefore, I am more likely to be a Boltzmann brain than a human — Michael
It is impossible for a human to not be a human. — creativesoul
What of it? — Michael
It's odd to me when one exclaims that they are more likely to be a philosophical tool of thinking than a human. — creativesoul
that discussion performatively, if not logically, presupposes the existence of a mutually experienced world external to the body — Janus
Where there has never been language use, there could have never been any discussion such as this one. It does not matter if one believes that or not. — creativesoul
In the case that I think there is no world, it follows that I believe that everything around me is merely a projection of my mind (or simply is my mind). If I also believe that I am here discussing for a purpose, it could very well be that I believe that I am interacting with the very contents of my mind — Lionino
That still does not defeat solipsism, what I said before to Banno applies to language too:
In the case that I think there is no world, it follows that I believe that everything around me is merely a projection of my mind (or simply is my mind). If I also believe that I am here discussing for a purpose, it could very well be that I believe that I am interacting with the very contents of my mind — Lionino
That still does not defeat solipsism — Lionino
It is a fact that our current scientific theories entail that we are more likely to be Boltzmann brains than ordinary humans. — Michael
that discussion performatively, if not logically, presupposes the existence of a mutually experienced world external to the body
— Janus
Where there has never been language use, there could have never been any discussion such as this one. It does not matter if one believes that or not.
— creativesoul
That still does not defeat solipsism... — Lionino
...what I said before to Banno applies to language too:
In the case that I think there is no world, it follows that I believe that everything around me is merely a projection of my mind (or simply is my mind). If I also believe that I am here discussing for a purpose, it could very well be that I believe that I am interacting with the very contents of my mind
— Lionino — Lionino
In the case that I think there is no world, it follows that I believe that everything around me is merely a projection of my mind (or simply is my mind). If I also believe that I am here discussing for a purpose, it could very well be that I believe that I am interacting with the very contents of my mind — Lionino
The issue of solipsism only gets raised because we cannot be, as with many other things, absolutely certain it is not the case. — Janus
It pays to remember that scientific theories, and science generally, only tell us how to make sense of how things appear to be to ordinary humans. — Janus
it is a fact that some interpretations of our current scientific theories entail that we are more likely to be Boltzmann brains than ordinary humans. — Janus
I am. — creativesoul
↪Michael I wonder what more Janus wants? What more could he want? — Banno
They tell us how to make sense of how things appear to us. Whether or not we are ordinary humans or Boltzmann brains is the very question being considered. — Michael
Drop the requirement of proof and take it as a "hinge" proposition, not to be subject to doubt....since it cannot be proven to not be the case, I cannot be absolutely certain. — Janus
Yep. It's not as if, that the description is only as it appears to ordinary humans implies that the description is wrong... But that seems to be what some folk think.That's all I want, and since it seems incoherent to want something unimaginable, you might also say it's all I could want. — Janus
There are, broadly speaking, four possibilities:
1. We are Boltzmann brains and our scientific theories are mostly correct
2. We are Boltzmann brains and our scientific theories are mostly incorrect
3. We are not Boltzmann brains and our scientific theories are mostly correct
4. We are not Boltzmann brains and our scientific theories are mostly incorrect
If our scientific theories are mostly correct then either (1) or (3) is the case, with (1) being most likely (as per those very scientific theories).
So one of these is true:
a. We are most likely Boltzmann brains (1 or 3)
b. Our scientific theories are mostly incorrect (2 or 4) — Michael
When you are not perceiving the world, you wouldn't be asking the question where is my cup, would you? The question sounds absurd.Well yes, there are good reasons to doubt that the cup will remain in the cupboard. The point here is simply that your "when I am not perceiving the world, there is no reason that I can believe in the existence of the world" is not a good reason to think that the cup has disappeared from the cupboard. — Banno
Again when you are not perceiving the world, you wouldn't be going out buying coffee either. Isn't it an absurd puzzling? The puzzle must be an illusion when you are not perceiving the world. Where does your puzzle come from?This had me puzzling. How do you go about buying coffee? There's the package on the shelf at the store, brightly labeled "Dark Roast". But when one is not perceiving the coffee, — Banno
When one is a hard idealist, and the world is just a representation in his mind, it would be hard to refute him. Indeed if what you see is a representation of the world, how do you know the real world?But it's not a belief. The world really exists. And it really exists precisely because there is nothing outside of ideas or perceptions. Since there is nothing outside those, there is no "outside" at all, and since there is no outside, the so-called "inside" is actually the world itself. So the world does exist. It lies within the idea itself. Idealism leads to realism and realism leads to idealism. It's a "loop". — LFranc
Boltzmann brains are a matter of speculation and not observation. — wonderer1
You're right that it's not a matter of observation (and perhaps that my binary distinction is unfair), but it's wrong to suggest that it's as simple as speculation. Rather it's a consequence of our best understandings of quantum mechanics and thermodynamics. — Michael
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