do not get them, and I don’t know how one could. If mind-dependent objects are everything the mind is comprehending, then it is comprehending itself. — NOS4A2
It’s too circular for my own tastes. It perpetually raises the question: what is it the mind is comprehending? Again, no one could produce such an object. — NOS4A2
What do you mean "then it is comprehending itself"? That doesn't seem like you are characterizing it correctly.
It's comprehending all the things that the mind comprehends. I don't get the question. All we know (literally) is what the mind has comprehended. How are you confused about that. Or how are you skeptical about that?
If it was comprehending anything that wasn’t mind it would be comprehending something that was independent of mind. — NOS4A2
It’s a circular answer. And you could never point to, illustrate, or show me a picture of something the mind comprehends. So why do you believe it? — NOS4A2
Do you think that the entire world is mind-dependent, or just certain of its features?
— charles ferraro
Where would the line be drawn? — Quixodian
No, that's not what mind-dependent means. Mind-dependent simply means that mind is comprehending/shaping/experiencing the reality in order for it to appear as it does (or in some constructions, for it to exist but then that gets into the schools of ontological and epistemological idealism). It does not mean that what is being comprehended is necessarily "the mind".
This I don't get at all. Quite the opposite. Every object and thing I think about is dependent of my mind. Name one thing that is not comprehended by the mind?
It does necessarily mean that what is being comprehended is the mind because the contents of the mind (like “conscious experience” or “phenomenal consciousness”) are necessarily mental. — NOS4A2
The device you’re using to type those words. What sort of shape did you make of this device? What of it has changed and become of it since you comprehended it? Can you point to these changes? — NOS4A2
Minimally, to be a subject is to be a subject "of" something. I am a subject of perceptions, of ideas, of feelings. So while the "ordering principle" of objectivity is subjective (Kant) knowledge of objectivity arises with experience. Hence, the "synthetic a priori" which yokes the two.
For me, any attempt to conceptualize a pure subjectivity falls into the black hole of idealistic-solipsism. Everything that I "am" is in "relation to...." and anything that I stand in relation to must be other than what I am.
Ontologically, I am speculating that perhaps the most fundamental characterization of reality is that of subjective and objective. We literally cannot think what a universe minus subjectivity would be because that would be a universe minus thought, which cannot be thought. Even if we tried to imagine it, that would still be an imagined universe. It is a variety of panpsychism for sure.
Reading your work is always a delight! Unique thinkers are what we need and I enjoy mulling over your work.
Lets say I have 1 apple. The oneness denotes a quantity, but if I remove the 1 and just say, "apple", is this a quality?
I quantitatively add another apple to a "pile". What is a "pile"?
I could also call them a "pair" of apples now. Is the word pair quantitative or qualitative now?
I add two red apples together. In my quantitative process did I not also produce the quality of 2 "red"?
I think it's a metaphysical statement - a way of thinking about things or a point of view - not a fact
I like the way @Janus said it in a different discussion - It's a catalyst for new ideas and feelings.
It demonstrates that our fundamental understanding of reality is human, I guess you would say subjective. That tells us not to be too arrogant about how universal our beliefs are.
Is this some sort of Analytic Idealism?
But sucking on one teaspoon of sugar (a quantitative process) will produce the sensation of sweetness (a quality). So P1 is not right.
I deny that “sucking on one teaspoon of sugar” is a quantitative process. — Bob Ross
Same argument you invoked, used to prove the opposite.P1: A qualitative process cannot produce a quantity. [p → !q]
P2: Quantities exist (e.g., more than one letter in this sentence). [!!q]
C1: The world (which has such quantities) cannot be qualitative processes. — Bob Ross
An "unmanifest mind" – how do we know it "objective exists"?... reality is fundamentally a mind. That mind, however, objectively exists; that is, it’s existence is mind-independent—i.e., it doesn’t manifest itself nor uphold its own existence. — Bob Ross
I'd asked about your phrase "objective reality" ... and so you're saying – referring to the above – "mind is mind-independent"? :chin:By ‘objective’, I mean ‘that which is mind-independent’ and by ‘mind-at-large’ I mean that reality is fundamentally a mind.
By "it" are you referring to "mind"? If so, then the evidence I'd requested is for a specimen of "a disembodied mind".It is disembodied in the sense that it doesn’t have an organic body...
An "unmanifest mind" – how do we know it "objective exists"? — 180 Proof
Interesting, so, for you, there’s two types of fundamental things: object and subject; and so you are not a monist then, correct? — Bob Ross
All intellection takes place in and through language, and language is emphatically a social construct/phenomenon. I just cant fathom the idea of a 'disconnected mind.'To your second sentence, I don’t think that everything that I am is in relation to something else but, rather, my knowledge of myself requires an other; — Bob Ross
Thought you might. So consider this proof that the world is quantitative:
P1: A qualitative process cannot produce a quantity. [p → !q]
P2: Quantities exist (e.g., more than one letter in this sentence). [!!q]
C1: The world (which has such quantities) cannot be qualitative processes. — Bob Ross
Same argument you invoked, used to prove the opposite.
Looks to me that you've juxtaposed qualitative and quantitative and then trapped yourself in a word game.
An "unmanifest mind" – how do we know it "objective exists"?
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By "it" are you referring to "mind"? If so, then the evidence I'd requested is for a specimen of "a disembodied mind".
There is not any publicly accessible evidence for such an entity.
And if "everything is fundamentally mind-dependent" (including this "fundamental", which I find self-refuting),
then "a universal mind" is only an idea, not a fact or "natural process".
I don't think that either monism or dualism do justice to what's going on in the universe. Cassirer talks about reality as both meta-physical and meta-psychical (i.e. transcending both matter and mind) and I think this has merit.
If you view the universe from a systems theoretic perspective, traditional problems are not solved so much as they do not appear as problems. For me, it is the logical and scientific presentation of a process ontology.
Then how do you account for the hard problem of interaction? — Bob Ross
Yes, and since you're making a fact-claim that there is "the universal mind" by which "consciousness is best explained", you're argument is pseudo-science, not metaphysics.If by ‘evidence’ you mean just something you can tangibly test, then obviously no one can offer you that in metaphysics; ... — Bob Ross
If this is so, then this so-called "use of reason" does not consist of sound arguments (i.e. lack of factually true premises ergo lack of factually true conclusion). This sort of "guess" consists of an untestable explanation about matters of fact (e.g. "experience") which is mere pseudo-science unlike, for instance, Kant's transcendental arguments which are epistemological critiques of metaphysical speculations of "pure reason".... the whole point of metaphysics is to use reason to guess what lies beyond that experience which explains that experience.
Agreed. Also, science rules-out bad (i.e. falsifed or untestable) explanations and thereby abductively affirms only provisionally better (i.e. successfully tested) explanations. As the original Aristotlean corpus suggests, metaphysics – First Philosophy – consists in categorical generalizations abstracted from the 'observed' conditions and limits of nature – physus – which first must be learned by 'empirical inquiries' Aristotle calls "Physics" – science; thus, the relation between 'metaphysics and physics' is a form of reflective equilibrium so that First Philosophy only conceptualizes and interprets scientific – successfully tested (or testable-in-principle) – explanations but cannot itself – as metaphysics – "explain" anything.Science is only a negative criteria for metaphysics (viz., it can weed out the really bad theories) but never a positive criteria (viz., that science confirms a metaphysical theory as true).
Firstly, anecdotes are not scientific evidence. Secondly, the "experience" of "vivid dreams" cannot itself be conclusive "evidence" for anything "beyond experience" which could be a candidate for – "guess" of – an "explanation of experience".There’s plenty of evidence that we can explain the world in terms of mind. For example, have you ever had a vivid dream?
And what "best explains" this "mind-dependent world"?That consciousness is best explained via a mind-dependent world.
Non sequitur (i.e. quantum woo woo).That quantum physics, such as entanglement, is best explained when thought of as extrinsic representations within a universal mind.
I object to "P1"I gave an argument here in the OP for a mind-dependent, qualitative world: let’s start there. What premise (or premises) did you disagree with?
which is obviously not true in many cases.P1: A quantitative process cannot produce a quality. [p → !q] — Bob Ross
So "universal mind" is not fundamental – dependent on – "mind-independent existence". Yes, minds are dependent on non-mind (i.e. physicalism).Just to clarify, I am not saying that the universal mind is itself mind-dependent; as existence itself is mind-independent.
I agree. Thus, the physicalist paradigm: the universe is fundamental and minds are (or "the mind is") emergent in, dependent on, derivative from the universe.There isn’t some mind outside of the universe that willed it into existence.
To really appreciate it, a good grasp of systems theory is essential
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It is assumed that many phenomena can be understood only by taking into account the full set of relations constituting them, without reducing them to casual interactions between analytically isolated parts.
Yes, and since you're making a fact-claim that there is "the universal mind" by which "consciousness is best explained", you're argument is pseudo-science, not metaphysics.
If this is so, then this so-called "use of reason" does not consist of sound arguments (i.e. lack of factually true premises ergo lack of factually true conclusion). This sort of "guess" consists of an untestable explanation about matters of fact (e.g. "experience") which is mere pseudo-science unlike, for instance, Kant's transcendental arguments which are epistemological critiques of metaphysical speculations of "pure reason".
Agreed. Also, science rules-out bad (i.e. falsifed or untestable) explanations and thereby abductively affirms only provisionally better (i.e. successfully tested) explanations. As the original Aristotlean corpus suggests, metaphysics – First Philosophy – consists in categorical generalizations abstracted from the 'observed' conditions and limits of nature – physus – which first must be learned by 'empirical inquiries' Aristotle calls "Physics" – science; thus, the relation between 'metaphysics and physics' is a form of reflective equilibrium so that First Philosophy only conceptualizes and interprets scientific – successfully tested (or testable-in-principle) – explanations but cannot itself – as metaphysics – "explain" anything.
Firstly, anecdotes are not scientific evidence
Secondly, the "experience" of "vivid dreams" cannot itself be conclusive "evidence" for anything "beyond experience" which could be a candidate for – "guess" of – an "explanation of experience".
And what "best explains" this "mind-dependent world"?
That quantum physics, such as entanglement, is best explained when thought of as extrinsic representations within a universal mind.
Non sequitur (i.e. quantum woo woo).
I object to "P1"
P1: A quantitative process cannot produce a quality. [p → !q] — Bob Ross
which is obviously not true in many cases.
So "universal mind" is not fundamental – dependent on – "mind-independent existence". Yes, minds are dependent on non-mind (i.e. physicalism).
I agree. Thus, the physicalist paradigm: the universe is fundamental and minds are (or "the mind is") emergent in, dependent on, derivative from the universe.
To me, that is just ungrammatical and, thusly, does not reference anything (except for being “a word”). Is it “an apple”? If so, then you just have “1 apple” minus “1 apple”, which is nothing. Are you talking about the essence of an apple? The concept? — Bob Ross
It could be that “a pile” is just a useful indefinite, and thusly qualitative or perhaps just ambiguous, colloquial term to note a hazy bit of reality; just like how there’s no exact spot where a heap becomes a pile of sand. We could force the terms to start somewhere definite, or just let it be qualitative (indefinite) and let people decide what is the most useful in the context. — Bob Ross
Perhaps I am confused as to what you are saying, but I think the words that we use to describe reality single out things, which will make it quantitative; but the words themselves do not reference something that is quantitative. For example, yes, one red apple plus one red apple is two red apples; but “redness” and the “actual apple” are qualitative. We use quantities to estimate the qualitative. — Bob Ross
There is a difference between one apple, one pear, and one penny. The quantity is the same, but its the qualities that separate them right?
The identity of the concept of "apple" cannot be quantitative, because no two apples are quantitatively alike
If we were to add two apples and compare them, we would see one is slightly lumpier than the other.
The redness would not be the same, nor the height and size. All of these seem to be qualities.
But qualities can be processed as quantities. After all, remove the qualities from the quantity, and you are left with a qualityless abstract number.
One the flip side, some qualities do not make sense without some quantity. Saying "apple" doesn't roll off the tongue like "an apple does".
But then what about adding two piles of sand together? Is this not a mix of quantitative and qualitative?
Let us remove the quality again however, and what are we left with? Isn't "oneness" itself a quality then?
I will try to answer faster next time, I am busy as of late.
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