For an idealist this is a tautology, or self-evident. It can't be disproven from second order logic. (to be is to be perceived)To be perceived is to exist is false. — TheMadFool
But didn't you agree that dreams are immaterial? Are they not perceptions?, off the top of my head I can say, to be material is to be perceived. That means, — TheMadFool
Are you suggesting we clarify that here, or are you saying that we should establish which of those we are using as a goal and framework?First, though, it's important to be clear on the differences between (1) proof or demonstration or inference, (2) debate, and (3) cooperative inquiry. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't know if there is a rule. I focus more on clarity than adding substance. The latter is hard to do if I believe the argument is lacking in substance. Its harder to do than I thought.Question: Is it merely a matter of demonstrating understanding of your opponent's argument and being articulate to present it well? Or should you also strive to make an even better argument with more facts and better logic? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Well they need to question the parts that don't make sense to them until they can form a steel man. Even if the position is incoherent, it should at least have a faux-coherency that they can express. There is going to be a reason they believe, even if it's not good, you should be able to see how they got tricked and why the trick has a convincing allure. If they won't bother to be flexible enough to grasp where the other is coming from, then they lose, and the audience or moderator can vote on this. Of course a close minded person won't admit itSteel manning won’t prove the other wrong because they may interpret their inability to understand your position as a result of faulty reasoning on your part.. They can say your position is incoherent.
I’m neither a materialist nor an idealist, but I’m game. — Joshs
How might I distinguish a material object from an immaterial object? We have to give a coherent definition of 'material' and 'object'. Objects in our dreams are experienced virtually identically to objects in our waking world, would you agree? I guess I could say any or every object in my dreams are, ultimately, immaterial. And is there a difference between dream objects and other objects? Again, what exactly do we mean by 'object'?Name one immaterial object and name one thing you know for certain doesn't exist. — TheMadFool
I don't see the need to over exaggerate the power of their argument. I mean being charitable enough to express their point of view as well as you reasonably can. For example, maybe their argument isn't horrible, but they aren't expressing it well, so you express their argument in a clear way...rather than focussing on how it is poorly expressed.↪Yohan It doesn't establish proof because we could both be wrong. It's an interesting take but to steelman a position is protecting it from criticism and ensuring it's errors are never corrected. So, I would argue that we try and tear down our own positions and see what's left. I do think there is a better way to argue and Karl Popper defined it as an attitude that “I may be wrong and you may be right, and by an effort, we may get nearer to the truth.” — Cheshire
I'm saying we should make sure we understand the other before we argue against them, and encourage the other to demonstrate they understand us before we try to defend against their straw man version of our argument.I have no idea what "steel man" means in this context. — T Clark
I think it's great for the mind to stretch beyond it's prejudice and bias. Often there may not seem to be a clear answer once one has honestly and vigorously argue from both sides of a position.One should always try to be a theoretical advocate for the opposition. Professors will often assign a student to a side, whether the student agrees with that side or not. The student must then put on zealous advocacy for that side. I've watched it change minds. I've also seen an opponent make a better case, and show a better understanding of his opposition than his opposition does. On this very forum I have, in the past, asked an opponent to please make my case for me just so I knew he understood what I was saying. He declined. — James Riley
What is the benefit or justification for assuming a proposition is false, before it has been proven true or false? Making assumptions goes directly against the spirit of reason. Every mistake in reason amounts to making some assumption. Prove everything, assume nothing. That's the motto of reason .I can agree with most of that, but I think skepticism is more than being open to something being false. I would define it more like assuming something isnt true until there are good reasons to believe it is true. The skeptic says “prove it.”. — DingoJones
Open minded means I'm open to the possibility that something is true. Sceptical means I am open to the possibility something is false. Neither leads to belief or disbelief, of themselves. I can be entirely open minded to a possibility, yet find no compelling reason to believe the possibility is an actuality. I can be entirely skeptical of a possibility being an actuality, yet not believe it is not an actuality.My point was that you shouodnt be so open minded that you believe anything. Skepticism is just as valuable as an open mind, finding a balance between them is key to not believing in nonsense and/or incorrect things. — DingoJones
God forbid anyone should open their mind completely up, and thereby have full capacity to use it.though we should have an open mind it shouldn't be so open it falls out — DingoJones
It's very hard to convince someone to change views without first building rapport and trust. This is why first Steel Manning the other's view, then offering an argument against it, politely, will on average work better than characterizing the other's point of view in the worst possible light before arguing against it.Adults running around believing characters in children's stories are real has slowed down social progress — Cheshire
Some atheists and some theists are content with themselves. Others feel a push to convince other's to believe as they do. I would guess out of a subconscious insecurity that maybe they are wrong, and the more they can convince others to believe as they do, the more they themselves will believe. I know I've been in that state of mind. I'm probably in it now. Anyway, it's another part of human nature. Fighting against the maladies of human nature usually serve to further irritate them. It's easier to light a candle than than curse the darkness? Maybe after one has managed to refrain oneself from cursing the darkness, which is hard.But why do we care how others pursue happiness. — SteveMinjares
But won't the majority turn to more materialism and consumerism to fill the void of existential angst and meaninglessness without some belief in something more than material existence?We need to dispel this notion of a tyrannical sky daddy if humanity is going to progress. The masses cling to this idea of eternal salvation and this myth stunts psychological growth and prohibits humanity from realizing its destiny. — K Turner
If I say it's self evidently hot, because I directly experience the heat...I'm explaining my experience, which is self evident. I can also point to sweat and other things caused by heat. Something can be self evident yet also given indirect inferences to its truth as well. However, indirect inferences are not proof. When did I claim I was offering proof? I said my view cannot be proven to someone who has a radically different view.Why do you say that it's self-evident when you take the trouble of proving it? — TheMadFool
That's odd because you seem to be "...providing arguments..." — TheMadFool
I owe the insight to sight. I just see it.How did you arrive at this conclusion? To what do you owe this insight to if not thinking?
What I mean by "everything supervenes on thinking" is that no matter what this exercise of homing in on the "...most useful skill..." involves, it, for certain, requires us to think well. — TheMadFool
It's self-evident to me. It's like asking how I came to the conclusion of an axiom. I can't prove axioms by way of logic. Axioms are pre-logical, based on direct knowledge.How does everything supervene on thinking?
Most failure of understanding is due to an inability to see the obvious, rather from an inability to think.
— Yohan
How did you arrive at this conclusion? To what do you owe this insight to if not thinking? — TheMadFool
I think it was Orwell who said to see what's in front of ones nose requires a constant struggle.There's some truth to this but I was asking more about your idea about people's 'inability to see the obvious.' I don't think we can see without thinking. We see, then we process and put what we see into some context. This might be different if you were enlightened (a category of human I would consider contentious at best). And what is 'the obvious'? — Tom Storm
Seriously?Adaptive ability doesn't quite cut it because it fails Kant's maxim. What if everyone adapated (to each other)? I would adapt to you and you would adapt to me but that doesn't make sense because if I adapt to you, you wouldn't need to adapt to me and vice versa. — TheMadFool
How does everything supervene on thinking?Thinking well. Given everythjng else supervenes on this one skill, it would stand us in good stead if each and everyone of us honed it to perfection, if possible of course. — TheMadFool
Here I agree it's context dependent or not answerable.Are you essentially arguing that non-attachment is the overarching skill here; or resilience? — Tom Storm
Well, it seems like you adapt naturally so you don't have to contemplate all that it involves.Is adapting to change different to accepting change? What do you consider to be a change requiring an adaptive shift? — Tom Storm
I think this is a good caveat. It reminds me of the book The subtle art of not giving a F. I think it says something about finding something worth giving an F about, and lesser things you will care about less.Merely focusing on "putting things aside" and "moving on" can move one away from some problem, but not automatically toward a valued direction in life. While moving toward a valued direction in life takes care of everything else.
(It's similar to the difference between running from danger and running to safety.) — baker
As a semi self-identifying Jew, I would just like to voice my, perhaps short sited suggestion, to consider not banning anti-semitic conspiracy theory posters outright. I don't know exactly what your criteria is for what constitutes antisemitic, but I like to hear people's concerns about "my people", as empathy can help to dismantle people's hate, and they may open their mind to reason. I think a philosophy forum is a good place for sensitive topics to be discussed with objectivity. If they have bad reason's for their beliefs, then this is a good place for those bad reasons to be exposed for all to see.Posting something that endorsed an anti-semitic conspiracy theory. — fdrake
Honestly I lack motivation to read the links. But I'd discuss it if you feel to. I'm a little confused about how matter is a type of information. When I hear the word 'information' I think of form or structure. Bring to my mind the analogy of ocean and waves, where the waves are forms of water. Idealists say the water is essentially something like awareness, and the materialists say its forms of matter. I don't get what it would mean to call the water 'information', as for me that refers to the wave, the form, rather than the essence?FWIW, I'll introduce you to the notion that everything in this world consists of immaterial mental Information (ideas), including Matter. Neuroscientist Don Hoffman has produced an update of Kant's idealism. And my own thesis of Enformationism concludes that both Energy and Matter are forms of universal Information. :smile: — Gnomon
Maybe nobody else responded because there is already some ontology threads up... I wanted to try and explore the implications of each view point, and see if they lead to any absurd conclusions. I don't see how if all is matter...that that doesn't mean matter has thoughts and that matter can be deluded etc. To me it doesn't sound right. I guess my concern is the same old concern, and such doesn't bother materialists.You wrote this 5 hours ago and no one has responded but, possibly out of my depths as usual, I am daring to speak. — Jack Cummins
I don't know. I do think monism is the answer. But does that mean mind and matter share one essence, that one is a version of the other, or something like that? If one is a form of the other, I have a really hard time understanding how mind can be a form of matter. The fundamental essence should be whichever is simpler, more basic. Consciousness is undoubtable. I have direct access to it, as it. Matter on the other hand...no matter how much we know about it, the question can always remain, what are its mind-independent properties and how is mind able to experience something that is non-mental? Shouldn't awareness only be aware of things within its own scope? Just like, taste can only perceive flavors. Mind should only be able to sense things which have its nature.I am inclined to think that none of these positions contains the full perspective and that mind and matter are weaved together, with neither coming before or after. Perhaps the underlying truth is at the heart of quantum reality, Plato's forms, Kant's transcendent reality or even Jung's collective unconscious. — Jack Cummins
Mind is just a basic word for whatever goes on inside of a person, as opposed to what we can observe about them from looking at their physical characteristics. At least I think that is how people who disagree with you are defining it. Thought, intellect, feelings, will, memory, impressions. Mind is kind of a catch all word for the combination of all those things. You can claim those things are not all part of a singular thing called a mind, but what appears absurd to many is claiming those things are reducible to matter.For what it’s worth, if the only reason for believing in minds is that they explain consciousness, then how is this anything more than a “god of the gaps” style argument? “Brains can’t explain consciousness, but minds can, therefore minds exist.” All the while completely overlooking or ignoring the fact that minds themselves require an explanation. Hitchens’s razor seems to dispose of this rather quickly. — Pinprick
The burden of proof is on the materialists to demonstrate something non-mental.To be specific, I don’t believe minds exist, only brains do. Until some sort of evidence can be presented that shows minds, of the metaphysical/immaterial variety, are even possible of existing, I see no reason to change my belief. I’m always open to the possibility that there is evidence that I’m not aware of, however. — Pinprick
