What is important to note though, is that materialism is reducible to a form of idealism, not vise versa. This assigns logical priority to idealism over materialism. — Metaphysician Undercover
The most plausible explanation I can think of is that there is something there independent of the human that we are all seeing — Janus
You defer to science as the arbiter of reality, saying that anything that can't be known by science is a matter for faith. — Wayfarer
A number of others have already addressed that - we're equipped with the same senses and inhabit a world of shared definitions, so we tend to see things the same way. — Wayfarer
So, some microphysical thing? — Manuel
Not a fact—a mere assumption. — Janus
If one notices something, ask the other if they also notice the same thing—that would be a proper test. — Janus
The only way a strict separation is possible is if you assume that matter cannot be mental in any respect, or that mind is above matter, which is not coherent until someone says what matter is, and where it stops. — Manuel
What sort of thing is the world as it is? — Banno
Seeing things in the same way and seeing the same things are not the same. We can see the same things in different ways. — Janus
I was not evaluating your comment, I was asking if this structure is what you think is the same for all creatures - as I did not understand your specific description. — Manuel
Now, it's your turn to explain how you believe that "matter" signifies something other than an idea. — Metaphysician Undercover
Matter' is an idea. If it signifies anything it signifies something that is not an idea. — Janus
I thought you were asking me to speculate as to what the structures we perceive as objects might be. It seems animals will not conceptualize structures in the ways we do or even conceptualize them at all. Perhaps I don't understand your question. — Janus
Meaning, you can't have any idea of it. — Wayfarer
If it signifies anything it signifies something that is not an idea. — Janus
Why can't mind be a specific configuration of matter? Is there a principle in nature that prevents mind from arising from certain combinations of matter? Not that I know of. — Manuel
that is, wherever there’s life, there’s also something like mind, even if it’s not conscious or sentient in the way we think of it. — Wayfarer
If so, then complex minds in higher organisms wouldn’t just be the product of matter—mind could also be understood as a causal factor. The fact that mind is not something that can be identified on the molecular level is not an argument against it - as everyone knows, identifying the physical correlates of consciousness is, famously, a very hard problem ;-) — Wayfarer
The things we perceive are not ideas. — Janus
there's not much of a difference. — Manuel
I just don't see why I have any reason to deny that experience comes from modified physical (world, immaterial, neutral, whatever you want to call it) stuff. — Manuel
Because it's materialism, and I reject materialism. — Wayfarer
But that is a stipulation that mind is above matter. — Manuel
Why can't mind be a specific configuration of matter? — Manuel
Which raises an interesting possibility: could this self-maintenance be the earliest appearance of mind, even if in a rudimentary form? If so, then complex minds in higher organisms wouldn’t just be the product of matter—mind could also be understood as a causal factor. The fact that mind is not something that can be identified on the molecular level is not an argument against it - as everyone knows, identifying the physical correlates of consciousness is, famously, a very hard problem ;-) — Wayfarer
What I explained is that it is the result of, a conclusion drawn from understanding the concept of matter. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is because matter is a principle assumed to account for the apparently deterministic aspects of the world, i.e. temporal continuity, while mind and free will are things requiring exception to that, i.e. temporal discontinuity.
Matter cannot be configured in a way other than what is allowed for by determinist causation. This I believe is the importance of understanding the relation between "matter" and Newton's first law. Newton assigns to matter itself, a fundamental property, which is inertia, and this renders all material bodies as determined. So mind, which has the capacity to choose, cannot be a configuration of matter. — Metaphysician Undercover
Because physics does not show determinism, it at best suggests probabilities, which are very foreign to our debates on free will. — Manuel
You simply cannot address the objections I make to your position. — Janus
The only remaining issue then, would be if matter came before mental properties, or if mental properties came before material ones. — Manuel
What I do is separate "mind" from "soul", in the way described by Aristotle. Soul is the base, so that all the potencies, capacities, or powers of the various life forms (self-nourishment, self-movement, sensation, and even intellection), are properties of the soul. This allows that mind, or intellect, in the human form, as a power of the soul, can come into existence through the process of evolution. But soul itself is prior. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems we are an impasse here for the time being. I propose to park the conversation here and we can pick it up in some other thread, maybe by then we could understand each other better,
But I suspect we agree on something like 70% of the main topics, that is, if you still maintain some agreement with some version of Kant (albeit modified), if not then we may have drifted apart, which is fine.
I'll leave the proposal for you to decide. — Manuel
I do address them, and you object to my objections. I'm not lecturing you, just making my case. You don't like, fine. You can't say I don't make an effort. — Wayfarer
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