Sure. But your conscious experience is of your perceptions, feelings, preferences, wants, likes and dislikes among your surroundings, Those are exactly what one would expect as the experience of an animal, or any other purposefully-responsive device. — Michael Ossipoff
It's just the simplest description consistent with our experience. — Michael Ossipoff
I can't prove that your elaborate Dualism is wrong. — Michael Ossipoff
Don't you see that "consciousness" of yours is your perception and analysis of your surroundings, maybe with a monitoring of that analysis, for purposes of optimization or communication? ...and your feelings of preference, likes, dislikes, fears, etc.? — Michael Ossipoff
I've looked up a number of definitions of "biological-reductionism. — Michael Ossipoff
We are survival machines – robot vehicles blindly programmed to preserve the selfish molecules known as genes. This is a truth which still fills me with astonishment. — Richard Dawkins
An impersonal, unreflective, robotic, mindless little scrap of molecular machinery is the ultimate basis of all the agency, and hence meaning, and hence consciousness, in the universe. — Daniel Dennett
I've agreed that your own 1st-person point-of-view is the only really valid one, because it's what your life-experience possibility-story is about.
But your Dualism has the burden-of-proof, because of its unnecessary elaborateness. — Michael Ossipoff
As some famous philosopher was quoted (recently in these forums) as saying, we can't want or not want something by wanting to want or not want it. — Michael Ossipoff
.Sure. But your conscious experience is of your perceptions, feelings, preferences, wants, likes and dislikes among your surroundings, Those are exactly what one would expect as the experience of an animal, or any other purposefully-responsive device. — Michael Ossipoff
.I'm not arguing against that.
.I'm saying conciousness is the ontological starting point, which you seem to agree with.,
.It's just the simplest description consistent with our experience. — Michael Ossipoff
.But how can it be the simplest when consciousness is the proper starting point?
.Conciousness does not present itself to you as "animal".
.You still haven't peeled back the onion layers far enough; I'm not talking about our conscious experience of our physical surroundings; I'm talking about the pure, simple, experience of your conscious mind: your bare thoughts and feelings.
.,I can't prove that your elaborate Dualism is wrong. — Michael Ossipoff
.Where have I constructed an elaborate dualism in this thread?
.Ironically, conciousness as the ontological starting point is the simplest possible way to begin a philosophy.
.It's the most intuitive. What you're perceiving as elaborate and unnecessarily complicated are the layers of the onion of your mind that you need to peel back in order to arrive at this simplest, purest starting point.
.Don't you see that "consciousness" of yours is your perception and analysis of your surroundings, maybe with a monitoring of that analysis, for purposes of optimization or communication? ...and your feelings of preference, likes, dislikes, fears, etc.? — Michael Ossipoff
.
Peel back further; it's not only that.
Schopenhauer: 'Man can do what he wills but he cannot will what he wills.' It is a comment on the difficulty of reigning in the will, or how desires have a life of their own. — Wayfarer
An impersonal, unreflective, robotic, mindless little scrap of molecular machinery is the ultimate basis of all the agency, and hence meaning, and hence consciousness, in the universe. — Daniel Dennett — Wayfarer
Then where’s the need for this additional Dualistic entity that you call “Consciousness”? — Michael Ossipoff
I suggest that all that’s objectively, or globally-assertably, real and existent or true are maybe some abstract logical facts. — Michael Ossipoff
You insist on wanting to artificially, unnecessarily, dissect the animal into a Consciousness and a body. — Michael Ossipoff
Most animals have no awareness of having or being a Consciousness. Only imaginative Dualist philosophers can create that fiction.
.
Would you say that a squirrel perceives that it is a Consciousness, or that it just perceives that it likes acorns?
.
If squirrels could speak English, and if you could ask a squirrel what it is, would it say that it’s a Consciousness? Or would it say, “I’m someone who likes acorns. Give me some acorns.” — Michael Ossipoff
You think that you’re a Consciousness that “has” a body. — Michael Ossipoff
You say that what’s ontologically-primary is a Consciousness that is separate from the body. — Michael Ossipoff
You say that Consciousness is the proper starting-point. Can you show justification for that claim? — Michael Ossipoff
Alright, I admit that you haven’t been very specific, but I assume that you’re saying that, in addition to a physical body, in addition to the animal, there’s a separate entity called a Consciousness. You must mean that, when you say that we aren’t just the animal. — Michael Ossipoff
…maybe a philosophy constructed abstractly, instead of from our actual experience. — Michael Ossipoff
Is he an Eliminative Physicalist? — Michael Ossipoff
Maybe I don't thoroughly understand the history of Dualism, but I've read statements of its various versions (a long time ago). — Michael Ossipoff
We could choose to call you a Consciousness, but what are you in that story? — Michael Ossipoff
The story is about that animal’s experience. — Michael Ossipoff
Most animals have no awareness of having or being a Consciousness. — Michael Ossipoff
You’re positing an abstract thing, a Consciousness, that has a body, and is the experiencer. That’s positing a contrived entity, and an artificial dissection. — Michael Ossipoff
Recognizing that conciousness is ontologically primary requires a very robust amount of philosophical and mental work. — Noble Dust
"Then where’s the need for this additional Dualistic entity that you call “Consciousness”? “ — Michael Ossipoff
.
I never said I was a dualist.
.
., and because my correction about spiritualism/dualism made you realize that you meant dualism
., which is now what you've correctively proceeded to accuse me of.
.I'll go ahead and let you know here that I don't consider myself a dualist or a monist (or an idealist) in the classical senses.
.I suggest that all that’s objectively, or globally-assertably, real and existent or true are maybe some abstract logical facts. — Michael Ossipoff
.What?? How does that relate to your insistence on "animalism"? Are we just animals, or is objective reality just "some abstract logical facts", or are you an idealist like you say later on, or...???
.You insist on wanting to artificially, unnecessarily, dissect the animal into a Consciousness and a body. — Michael Ossipoff
.Your assumptions about what I'm arguing are getting tiring.
.Nowhere am I arguing for a "dissection". I'm arguing for the primacy of conciousness within experience.
.As I'm reading through your tome of a response [5 pages] I'm feeling more and more that you're not really comprehending my argument at all.
.I sincerely don't mean that as an insult.
.You basically continue to say the same things, and now I'm just saying the same things, because you're not addressing my points
Most animals have no awareness of having or being a Consciousness…
Would you say that a squirrel perceives that it is a Consciousness, or that it just perceives that it likes acorns?
.
.
If squirrels could speak English, and if you could ask a squirrel what it is, would it say that it’s a Consciousness? Or would it say, “I’m someone who likes acorns. Give me some acorns.” — Michael Ossipoff
.I don't even know what to say.
You say that Consciousness is the proper starting-point. Can you show justification for that claim? — Michael Ossipoff
.Re-read if you want that
.Classically, dualism means that there is an inseparable divide between the two concepts soul and body. I don't see consciousness as inseparably "other" from physicality, but neither am I a physicalist. If I have to label myself with blithe philosophical terms, it would be something like "generative mystical monist". I doubt that would interest you much though...
.…maybe a philosophy constructed abstractly, instead of from our actual experience. — Michael Ossipoff
..Right, I didn't elaborate clearly on what I meant by simplest. Conscious experience as ontological starting point is not experientially the simplest starting point; physicality is, which is your argument.
.Let's clear this up. What I'm saying is that the simplicity of a physical starting point is not in consonance with the actual state of reality.
.The actual state of reality is what you seem to consider superfluously elaborate.
.Recognizing that conciousness is ontologically primary requires a very robust amount of philosophical and mental work.
.But once arrived at, it's the simplest and purest starting point.
And 'philosophical materialism' is....well...... — Wayfarer
.Reductionism is to say of something that it is 'nothing but' - in this case, that humans are 'nothing but' animals, or that the mind is 'nothing but' neurochemicals.
.I've agreed that your own 1st-person point-of-view is the only really valid one, because it's what your life-experience possibility-story is about.
.
But your Dualism has the burden-of-proof, because of its unnecessary elaborateness. — Michael Ossipoff
.But we've very much lost touch with the understanding that gives rise to this perspective. We nowadays are very grounded in 'objectivism' - that what is real is what is 'out there'
I subscribe to a version of science-of-mind Physicalism (pomp) — Michael Ossipoff
Michael, I'm not sure you are aware of this, but your metaphysics probably is the antithesis of what you are seeking. It is one brute fact after another and there seems to be an endless steam of them to support your view of life. Maybe, if you are interested in a parsimonious philosophy, you might want exam[ine] your posts, and as an exercise, number each of your brute facts and then trying to limit them somehow? — Rich
You have your IF statements
(and there are tons of them in your posts, as I said they are ceaseless) — Rich
, and then you have your Then statements which are in almost all cases arguable.
I am just not sure whether you recognize the plethora of brute facts in your philosophy.
Here are a couple examples from one sentence.
"I’m saying that “Consciousness” and “Mind” are unnecessary fictions, "
"the whole that is the animal."
the whole that is the animal. — Michael Ossipoff
Really Michael, your philosophy is simply an endless stream of IF statements, which are debatable, followed by even more debatable THEN statements. There are so many, it is difficult To know where to begin. I was simply wondering if you realized it. — Michael Ossipoff
Really Michael, your philosophy is simply an endless stream of IF statements, which are debatable, followed by even more debatable THEN statements. — Michael Ossipoff
There are so many, it is difficult To know where to begin.
Then don't.
I've already apologized for the fact that a physical world might not be as simple as you'd like it to be.
I was simply wondering if you realized it.
Good. You've caught on to the fact that Skepticism is about hypothetical "if-then" s. Congratulations — Michael Ossipoff
It is a very open ended my metaphysics. If you can state and IF ... Then, then it is approved. Such a metaphysics will pretty much envelop all existing metaphysical ideas. It is wonderfully accepting. — Rich
You just made Skepticism the uber-concept that can "simulate every metaphysics." That gives it all meaning and no meaning. — Thanatos Sand
If people want to know what your personal use of the term Skepticism means, I suggest you write out a hard, clear definition of it.
You just made Skepticism the uber-concept that can "simulate every metaphysics." That gives it all meaning and no meaning.
— Thanatos Sand
I'm not quite sure what that means.
But of course every metaphysics that is contrived to somehow, in its own elaborate way, explain this physical world, can be simulated by Skepticism.
If people want to know what your personal use of the term Skepticism means, I suggest you write out a hard, clear definition of it.
I've defined, at great length and in great detail, the metaphysics that I call Skepticism.
I've also quoted dictionary definitions of skepticism, the common noun.
I've justified Skepticism as the name of my metaphysics, by the fact that complete rejection and avoidance of assumptions is skeptical.
If you have a specific objection to, or question about, Skepticism, feel free to say what it is.
Except your inclusion of all "if-then" statements counters thins since many "if-then" statements can be assumptions or brute-facts — Thanatos Sand
You could write if-then facts that are brute-facts, as I myself have said.
Really Michael, your philosophy is simply an endless stream of IF statements, which are debatable, followed by even more debatable THEN statements.
— Michael Ossipoff
Good. You've caught on to the fact that Skepticism is about hypothetical "if-then" s. Congratulations.
I'm not positing them. My point was that Skepticism doesn't posit them. Take that as part of the definition of Skepticism.
Many or most other metaphysicses, including Physicalism ("Naturalism") do need and use assumptions, and do posit, and depend on, brute-facts.
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