I've read several arguments here on the forum where people come to logical conclusion like: "Therefore, there must exist an entity, the so-called mind, that can freely decide." or "This proves that god exists" or ”Logical proof that the hard problem of consciousness is impossible to solve"
Is it possible that with solid premises and correct logical steps, we cannot always accept the conclusion? — Carlo Roosen
What about all these discussions in metaphysics & epistemology? Could it be that these topics cannot be addressed logically? Somebody must have said a few words about this already, I guess? — Carlo Roosen
Is it possible that with solid premises and correct logical steps, we cannot always accept the conclusion? — Carlo Roosen
All non-trivial logical premises ultimately involve empirical inferences made from observations of the real world — T Clark
There are things you can know independent of the 'real' world.
"I am conscious" is one. — Carlo Roosen
therefore 1 + 1 = 2 — Carlo Roosen
If we say "if 1) reality is determistic and 2) we have a free will, it follows 3) we exist outside reality". Where does this go wrong? — Carlo Roosen
This is presumably non-trivial. What empirical inference made from observation of the real world is involved? — Banno
This seems like a gigantic non-sequitur. What does this have to do with the discussion we are having? Besides that, your understanding of the determinism vs. free will issue is very different from mine. This is not the place to take that up. — T Clark
my consciousness is an aspect of the real world — T Clark
I was wondering, even while I do agree with the premises to some extend and it seems logically correct, I do not agree with the answer. — Carlo Roosen
There is a conceptual understanding of "me" operating in the world. But the direct, first person realisation of being conscious precedes any other knowing, and is "absolute" in the sense that I don't need anything else for that. — Carlo Roosen
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