... it is the case that all thought and belief are existentially dependent upon a plurality... — creativesoul
All thought and belief is meaningful. All meaning is attributed. All attribution of meaning is existentially dependent upon something to become sign/symbol, something to become significant, and a creature capable of drawing correlations, connections, and/or associations between the two. That is a plurality of things. — creativesoul
I'm not following you. I'm offering an outline of a deductive argument. I'm looking to discuss the merits of that argument(outline first actually). Either one will do. Both would be better,
Are you willing to discuss those outlines? — creativesoul
Ok. So, what would it take for the antecedent to be true? — creativesoul
Well, yes of course, there is obviously always the experience of others. I think this is really Heidegger's point: he saw "being-in-the-world' as the most primordial aspect of Dasein. But the point remains that no proof, in any deductive sense, can be given for the existence of the world or of other — Janus
acrosoft I think the distinction between our experience, phenomenologically considered, and "artificial games" is a valid one, although questioning the validity of that distinction is part of the critique mounted by some of the detractors of the phenomenological approach; for example semiotic and "process and information" thinkers of various stripes. — Janus
I think the 'object in itself' is associated with something like inter-subjectivity. It's more like a distinction between the object for us and the object for me. — macrosoft
As far as not being able to compare our cognition with the object to the object itself, this is mostly a matter of language. By 'cognition of the object,' we seem to mean the object as we have access to it. What would be left over is then precisely that part of the object that we cannot access. — macrosoft
[What] we can do is observe how others talk and act in the context of objects we think are there. If their speech and action is appropriate (fits the object being there), then we are confirmed in our perception. For the most part this is so automatic that it never crosses the threshold of consciousness. — macrosoft
I'm just asking if you agree that... if the premisses of the argument are true, then solipsism is not. — creativesoul
We can look at any and all examples of thought and belief. We can see that they are meaningful. We can know what that(being meaningful) takes by looking at the common denominators of all thought and belief and eliminating everything irrelevant to that. — creativesoul
It takes precisely what I've put forth in the OP... — creativesoul
Ok. This notion of 'cognition of the object' conflates the object and our access. The phrase "the object as we have access to it" is loaded chock full of dubious presuppositions. You've duly noted an obvious one(indirect or mediated perception). — creativesoul
What you've described above looks a lot like an example of language acquisition. — creativesoul
I agree that we can find lots of dubious presuppositions therein, but for me this is a problem with all discussions of this issue. We understand well enough what we mean in our everyday interactions. But then we want to hold some meaning in an exact position to build an argument with it. If the argument succeeds, then we've really only shown something about our artificial use of the word. The results depend on and apply only to some idiosyncratic semi-fixing of the meanings involved. — macrosoft
I think it goes that deep. What could someone mean by 'it is not the case that there is an external world.'? To whom are they talking? To deny the external world they need something like an external world. As I see it, there is a kind of embeddedness in a community that makes conversation possible in the first place. We are we before we are me. The me emerges from the we. Only after the concept of something like the ego has emerged can we go back and try to make it a foundation. In short, we have to have all kinds of semi-conscious beliefs/practices in common before we are even intelligible to one another. It seems like a hopeless task to try to go back and justify all of this shared understanding rigorously. Of course it's good to clarify here and there (wisely picking our battles.) — macrosoft
I'm just asking if you agree that... if the premisses of the argument are true, then solipsism is not.
— creativesoul
No, because as I said here, a "plurality of things" does not entail a "plurality of external things". The different kinds of experiences that a solipsistic mind has can be the plurality of things from which the thinking part draws its correlations, connections, and associations. — Michael
Only after the concept of something like the ego has emerged can we go back and try to make it a foundation. — macrosoft
One mind is not a plurality of things. Period. — creativesoul
I'm quite capable of deriving meaning from all of this without there being some external world that is causally responsible for my experiences. — Michael
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