• NOS4A2
    9.3k


    Olson provides the logical form so you can check its validity.

    1. x)(x is a human animal & x is sitting in your chair)

    2. (x)((x is a human animal & x is sitting in your chair) x is thinking)

    3. (x)((x is thinking & x is sitting in your chair) x = you)

    4. (x)(x is a human animal & x = you)
  • Clearbury
    124
    But I am not arguing that his argument is invalid, but that its second premise (and its third) has to be interpreted in a way that makes it question begging.

    premise 2 is ambiguous, for it could be interpreted to mean (as it does in 'the box is 90kgs') that the human animal sitting in the chair has associated with it something that is thinking). And then 3 could be similarly interpreted to mean 'the thing that is thinking is you'. So interpreted, the conclusion does not follow.

    So that cannot be the meaning that Olson has in mind. Instead we must interpret 2 as simply asserting taht the human animal is itself doing the thinking. That's question begging for that's precisely what's at issue.

    So, if we interpret the relevant premises in a non-question begging way, the argument is indeed invalid. But if we interpret the relevant premises in a way that preserves the argument's validity, then the premises become question begging.

    There's no dispute that we think. And there's no dispute that our bodies are human animals. The dispute is over whether the thing doing the thinking is the human animal or something merely associated with it. That dispute cannot be resolved to everyone's satisfaction by fiat.
  • Clearbury
    124
    and again illustrated by the post following

    It's the person associated with the human animal who is doing the thinking.
    — Clearbury
    Not necessarily.
    noAxioms

    That's beside the point. The point is that this claim 'it is the person asociated with the human animal who is doing the thinking' is not question begging, whereas 'it is thet human animal that is doing the thinking' is.

    Note, I am not arguing for or agaist the thesis that it is the human animal that is doing the thinking. I am pointing out that Olson's argument is question begging. Question begging arguments can still be sound.
    magine there is a weightless box into which a 90 kg person has been placed.
    — Clearbury
    OK, to apply that directly to the OP:

    (P1) Presently resting on the floor is a box.
    (P2) The box masses 90kg
    (P3) You are the contents of the box.
    (C) Therefore, the box is you.

    That doesn't seem to be begging anywhere, yet the conclusion doesn't follow from the premises,
    noAxioms

    That is not an accurate rendering of my implied argument. I mentioned the ambiguity of the word 'is', yet you've removed that very word from the crucial premise.

    The argument would go as follows:

    1. The only think on the floor is a box that is 90kg
    2. I am on the floor and I am 90kg
    3. Therefore, I am the box

    If premise 1 is interpreted one way - interpreted as meaning "the only thing on the floor is a box that may or may not contain something and that including whatever it may contain weighs 90kg" - the argument is invalid. For it does not then follow from my being on the floor and weighing 90kg that I am the box, for I may instead be something that is in the box (and is thereby responsible for its weight).

    If premise 2 is interpreted much more literally - as meaning that a box alone - a box without any contents - is the only thing on the floor and weighs 90kg, then the conclusion does follow, but is clearly false.
  • Clearbury
    124
    The only possibilities in philosophy seem to be reductionism or emergentism.Ludwig V

    I don't think that's right, though that may accurately characterize the positions most (?) contemporary philosophers hold about the matter.

    But another option - I think the one most of the great philosophers of the past held - is that our minds are distinct entities from our biological bodies. A dead human is still a human animal, it's just not got a mind anymore - the person has left the building.
  • noAxioms
    1.5k
    The point is that this claim 'it is the person asociated with the human animal who is doing the thinking' is not question begging, whereas 'it is thet human animal that is doing the thinking' is.Clearbury
    My point was that even if it is accepted that the human animal is doing the thinking, the conclusion that animalism is true does not follow. Yes, the premise begs the animal doing the thinking (as any premise begs whatever it is positing), but it does not beg animalism.

    What if 'you' includes the experiencer, the persisting fundamental addition that humans have and that bugs and robots don't. The animal part still does the thinking (explaining the expensive brain), but not the experiencing, and not the exertion of will, if that can somehow be separated from thinking, which it often is.
    That's what I mean by P2 not begging animalism, but only begging that the animal does the thinking. A lot of dualists would deny that the animal part does either of the thinking and experiencing. It's not a view I particularly understand, so I cannot speak authoritatively for the opposing view.


    Olson provides the logical form so you can check its validity.

    1. x)(x is a human animal & x is sitting in your chair)

    2. (x)((x is a human animal & x is sitting in your chair) x is thinking)

    3. (x)((x is thinking & x is sitting in your chair) x = you)

    4. (x)(x is a human animal & x = you)
    NOS4A2

    I actually don't follow the notation, but it seems illustrated by my attempt at applying something real to x.
    P1. x)(x is a big toe & x is at the front of your shoe)
    P2. (x)((x is a big toe & x is at the front of your shoe) x is thinking)
    P3. (x)((x is thinking & x is at the front of your shoe) x = you)
    C4. (x)(x is a big toe & x = you)

    Clearly this seems wrong, but it is the logic being employed, is it not?
    The bit about 'x is thinking' very much begs that it is the toe doing the thinking, and not 'you', which includes the toe but is not entirely consisting of the toe.


    Nobody replied to my query asking if animalism is in any way distinct from physical monism. I support such a thing, but that argument totally falls flat. The toe-ism argument is typically countered by one of incredulity, that a toe has not the capability for thinking and therefore there must be something more. That's another poor argument.
  • Corvus
    3.2k
    Are each of us numerically identical to an animal?NOS4A2
    We are undeniably animals in bodily nature having the biological functions, desires and system.
    However, we are also different from the other animals in respect of having sophisticated language and reasoning capacity .

    Intelligence is not same as being rational. I was in deep shock finding out that some folks think those are the same in the other thread here. A dog can be intelligent in doing some tasks and chores and tricks when trained. But no other animals than humans can be rational. And even some humans aren't rational.
  • Tzeentch
    3.8k
    What a load of Philo-babble. :lol:

    "Numerically identical to an animal" - this is the reason I can't take modern philosophy seriously. I scanned through the paper briefly, and maybe I missed it, but I couldn't even find the definition of 'animal' the writer uses to make his point.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    2.8k


    Blame the analytics. Before that demon lord Ockham showed up we had perfectly intelligible gems like:

    By way of the usual translations, the central argument of the Metaphysics would be: being qua being is being per se in accordance with the categories, which in turn is primarily ousia, but primary ousia is form, while form is quiddity and quiddity is actuality.
  • ENOAH
    843
    Why is the idea that we are animals seemingly unpopular among philosophers?NOS4A2

    We are animals. It is unpopular because the minute we accept that we are animals, dualism, ego/spirit, anamnesis, eternal truths, heaven, hell, and immortality all vanish into the illusions that they are
  • Bob Ross
    1.7k


    It is unpopular because by "animal" a philosopher tends to mean much more than what a scientist means by it. You are uncontroversially an animal in the latter sense; but it is worth mentioning that humans, as an animal, are deeply different than other animals. I don't see what's so controversial here.
  • Outlander
    2.1k
    It is unpopular because the minute we accept that we are animals, dualism, ego/spirit, anamnesis, eternal truths, heaven, hell, and immortality all vanish into the illusions that they areENOAH

    I'm afraid I don't follow. The large majority of philosophers do not subscribe to the idea of most if not all of the concepts you mention, so this can't be the source of their reasoning at all. Besides, what is an illusion, really? Something that can't be proven to be a substantial thing in its own right, not dependent of some other process or source. What is love? Friendship? Respect? These things by the aforementioned descriptors are but illusions too. Yet they drive men to madness, war, and on the opposite end provide comfort, purpose, and belonging. These things are regarded as substantial entities in and of themself, regardless if they be "facades" of biological workings or mere social constructs, by philosophers and non-philosophers, theists and atheists alike. Is this not so?
  • ENOAH
    843
    The large majority of philosophers do not subscribe to the idea of most if not all of the concepts you mention, so this can't be the source of their reasoning at all.Outlander

    You are correct and I was hasty. I believe that notwithstanding most philosophers rejecting the issues I raised, they are still dragged by them. But I am not prepared to provide evidence currently. So, i will happily defer to your point.

    These things by the aforementioned descriptors are but illusions too. Yet they drive men to madness, war, and on the opposite end provide comfort, purpose, and belonging. These things are regarded as substantial entities in and of themself, regardless if they be "facades" of biological workings or mere social constructs,Outlander

    It may be true that these things affect us; but I think your 'hint' that they might be facades is closer to the truth. While I realize you are not subscribing to that theory, I think, neither can it just be brushed away. Yes, we are permitted to recognize our differences from other animals because of these facades; but I think if we leap further and conclude that we are not animals because of these appearances, we are just being conceited.
123Next
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.