Including your merely "subjective" claim that "we can't ..." :roll:We can't know anything outside our subjective perceptions and understanding. — Truth Seeker
And therefore it's imaginary at best (i.e. not a true "claim") or self-refuting at worst.I think that my claim is merely subjective. — Truth Seeker
:roll: (e.g.) Start counting ...How would I know anything objectively? — Truth Seeker
This is only datum, not "knowledge" (i.e. a historical and/or scientific explanation), that is more-than-subjective insofar as (a) you can actually eat the bananas and (b) you cannot actually eat the fruit bowl and, even more so, (c) you can actually measure (e.g.) the resting masses of the bananas and fruit bowl, separately and together. What grounds, Seeker, do you have to doubt that "two bananas in a fruit ball" refers to more than just your "subjective sensory perception"?I counted that there are two bananas in my fruit bowl. — Truth Seeker
What grounds, Seeker, do you have to doubt that "two bananas in a fruit ball" refers to more than just your "subjective sensory perception"? — 180 Proof
Well, for starters, you don't have any reasonable grounds to doubt that you are "not in The Matrix" ...How do I know that I am not in the Matrix? — Truth Seeker
Whatever makes "my mind" mine (e.g. embodiment) cannot be internal to "my mind".How can we really know what is and what is not external to my mind?
Speculative suppositions are not matters of "proof" like (e.g.) mathematical theorems; rather they are matters of reasonableness. For instance, do you believe it is reasonable to doubt that there are 'other minds, the external world'? Apparently, Seeker, as this discussion demonstrates, you do not.Solipsism can't be proven or disproven.
How do you know this? Are you an expert or non-superficially familiar with universal quantum computation¹ (D. Deutsch)? Cite a fundamental physical law that is inconsistent with – prohibits – "the simulation hypothesis"; if fundamental physical laws do not prohibit it, propose some reasonable grounds to doubt that this universe is 'a simulation within a simulation within a simulation, etc' (N. Bostrom ... R. Penrose², S. Lloyd, S. Wolfram³, G. Mandelbroit ...) Again, it's a hypothesis about – model of – (aspects of) the physical world that is either experimentally testable (i.e. scientific) or it is not (i.e. pseudo-scientific or metaphysical) and therefore, in either case, is not a matter of "proof".The simulation hypothesis can't be proven or disproven.
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