The 'I' is the weakness in this statement. It is not 100 percent certain that the person thinking is you. — Beverley
Are you not even certain about typing in English? Surely, you can be certain that you are not typing in Japanese or another language? — Truth Seeker
The 'I' is the weakness in this statement. It is not 100 percent certain that the person thinking is you.
— Beverley
I think it is — flannel jesus
I don't think it is worth being concerned about, nor is the idea that there is no 'I' at the foundations of 'my' experince. — Tom Storm
The 'thing' controlling the thoughts that you perceive of as coming from you could be the evil demon that Descartes spoke of, or pretty much anything — Beverley
So the conclusion "I am" still follows — flannel jesus
Not if the thoughts are not yours. — Beverley
I disagree. My body could be part of a simulation, hallucination, dream or illusion. What is 100% certainly real is the experience of being conscious. I could be a solipsistic soul without a body. I could be a soul in a body. I could be a body without a soul. In all three possibilities, I am real. By "I", I mean my sentience. — Truth Seeker
Yes, even if the thoughts "aren't yours". In order to perceive thoughts handed to you externally, you first must *exist*. — flannel jesus
you could be — Beverley
I disagree for reasons already explained. I don't require anyone to agree with me about anything. — Truth Seeker
You are merely wrong. We do not actually KNOW anything at 100%. That would require perfection. Even if you think you know, or believe you know, you do not know. Knowing requires what might be referred to as god-like will, god-like awareness, and god-like being; all three at the same time.I am 100% certain that I am conscious but it is not possible for me to know with 100% certainty that my body, other humans, non-human organisms, the Earth and the rest of the Universe actually exist. — Truth Seeker
No, you do not perceive these things. You believe that you do. There is a marked difference. Speaking and writing correctly is difficult, but, ... better.I perceive my body, other humans, non-human organisms, the Earth and the rest of the Universe. — Truth Seeker
I would say that this statement is much closer to your 'knowing' than the others have been. It is indeed a hallucination, but, that situation was not inflicted upon you. It was chosen by you, incorrectly. And it will continue to be so. The hope is that you grow through suffering (the only way) to earn wisdom and approach truth/perfection.It is possible that what I perceive is either a dream or a hallucination or an illusion or a simulation and not objectively real. — Truth Seeker
You cannot know. And that aim, to know, is darkly improper as a stance. Approach knowing with the belief that you cannot arrive. This is better.It is also possible that my perceived reality is actually real, but I have no way of knowing this with 100% certainty. Given the fact that I cannot know with 100% certainty what is objectively real, how can I know what is morally correct with 100% certainty? — Truth Seeker
Yes, the fundamental nature of reality is neither order nor chaos, but both in flux and balance at the same time. There is no contradiction.Does quantum indeterminacy prevent macroscopic determinism? — Truth Seeker
In tracking the suggested answers I have offered you will realize I would say again, we cannot know. The need to know is foolish. The need to become more aware is wise. It is a matter of perspective.Quantum superposition does not create macroscopic superposition. When one tosses a coin, either the head or the tail ends up on the top but not both. How can we know if macroscopic determinism is true or false with 100% certainty? — Truth Seeker
What is real?Truth is whatever is real. From my point of view, my sentience is real. — Truth Seeker
What is your confidence on your knowledge? For instance, does God exist? How did the universe begin? Are you confident on all the answers on these questions?Certainty is the confidence I have about my knowledge about what is real. — Truth Seeker
I am not completely certain about whether I am a solipsistic soul without a body or a soul in a body or a body without a soul. — Truth Seeker
I know nothing. Apparently, you did not read for comprehension.↪Chet Hawkins "You are merely wrong. ... It is indeed a hallucination, but, that situation was not inflicted upon you. It was chosen by you, incorrectly."
- Chet Hawkins
How do you know that I am merely wrong? How do you know that it is a hallucination? How do you know that it was chosen by me? How do you know that it is incorrect? — Truth Seeker
There are in fact nine permutated equivalent statements at least:I think that the statement "I think, therefore I am." is incorrect. The correct statement is "I am, therefore I am." — Truth Seeker
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