Also, going off of what you've just written, if mind is needed to actualize such potential, it would itself have to be actual in order to do so; since potentiality can't actualize itself or another. So there would still be something, namely, mind, that existed independently of this potential, which proceeds to actualize it. — aRealidealist
I thought it might be useful in orienting your ideas in respect of other philosophers. Obviously at this point I can't anticipate what you mean by 'actualised materiality'. — Wayfarer
I'd like to agree with you but finding it difficult. Your presentation is rather idiosyncratic. — Wayfarer
Not a prejudice. Just aware of how disconnected they can be from ordinary life. — Andrew M
So, for the sake coherence could I summarize the position as a belief that if the right mind 'percepts' the intended target the truth about the target will be manifest. And one ought expect it may deviate from information gained by other means. — Cheshire
Perhaps you could briefly present the problem that you're attempting to solve, and why the conventional (and scientific) language that most people find eminently useful is not up to the task. — Andrew M
Let me tell you what my criteria is, for the writing I do about my metaphysical persuasion, which I classify as perception metaphysics. I stay away from logic as much as possible since I believe logic cannot reach or board realness, and realness is my main interest therefore my audience should not expect any scientific corroboration of my claims.Are people in some sense mistaken about that? If so, perhaps you could provide your criteria (or the metaphysical authority implied by "In metaphysical talk") for saying that that talk is incorrect/misguided. — Andrew M
These stimuli seem to hover somewhere in between natural existence and nonexistence yet they lean far away from nonexistence and more toward existence since they are apparently something that the senses can take in, with the brain needed to turn them into phenomena as 'existence' in our minds' reality, they only in that sense being named as 'pre-existent'. — PoeticUniverse
What is gained by subjugating logic to observation? — Cheshire
Before going to far; is there some novel conclusion that is supposed to be drawn that can't otherwise be assailed? — Cheshire
The Berkeleyan subjective idealist empiricist intuition is that the external work is made up of lots of properties - that is how we experience it. — bert1
A different example: Pre-existence is not a denial of logical facts. Let us supposed you visit a building located far away from your home. While you are there looking at it directly you perceive it and the building is set in reality. Later you go back home and remember the building, your memories of the building are set in actuality (or, the building is set in actuality owed to your memories of it). Therefore what makes the building real is you perceiving it (it is the direct subject/object relationship). When you are away from it only the location of the building is a fact of actuality corroborated by your memories. Far away the building is no more than a logical fact, suggested by either: your memories of it, a map, a television camera, etcetera, but it is not real unless perceived directly. Let us suppose while you are away the building roof collapses and no one see it happening, well the collapse is a fact of actuality waiting to be discovered. When someone arrives there and perceives the results of the collapse, the collapse is real. (It is set in reality). Again, actuality (pre-existence) is no negation of unobserved facts, but those facts are logical facts, not perceptive facts.Which are you implying to be the correct interpretation or neither. I realize it's later qualified, but I'm looking for a starting point. — Cheshire
I would be willing to suppose that the universe is expanding to keep up with how far we are looking, but mind actualization seems to limiting to be the only requirement for existence. Things that are out of view still need to remain in existence in so much as other variables states rely on them. The inner core of the earth is probably always there without the need for anyone constantly pinging it. — Cheshire
So, yep, got time, but maybe not inclination. — Mww
What are the properties of this substratum? — RogueAI
If all minds in the universe disappeared, what would be left? — RogueAI
Who are you talking to? — counterpunch
Is the mind an object? Does it exist independently? Or must each mind be actualised by another mind? — Michael
Is this "appearance-less essence" or "force" that exists in the external world not an object? — Michael
You have to be careful of the word "exist". Let's take the moon for example. Would the moon exist if no one was around? Well, the the big rock would exist, but there would be no one to call it "moon" (or for that matter to differentiate what a "rock" is from the space around it). So does that mean the moon exists or no? Just depends on your definition. — khaled
Either you are disagreeing with their claim in which case this is an empirical dispute. Or else you're using words unconventionally which is likely to confuse your audience. If the latter, can you restate your claim in conventional terms? — Andrew M
If things were wholly of my own making, actualized, then I couldn't really misunderstand or get something wrong about them. I'd know already. Something's amiss — jorndoe