It makes a difference only because I decided it would and my decision it would is arbitrary. — khaled
Or maybe you just can't understand itYa that is a big pile of nonsense. — Jeremiah
Can you elaborate on why exactly you think this is non sense. If you just call my reply non sense then proceed to make sweeping generalizations about an entire philosophy please cite the reasons you think so — khaled
You needed to assume certain premises to come to that conclusion. Had I been an idealist I would have disagreed with that statement saying that if it is not constantly remembered in "the mind of God" it wouldn't exist. — khaled
"Why should one believe his experience of sensing objects (as you defined them) is reliable" is a question unanswerable neither by the existence of objects nor by logic and so in order to see the existence of objects as reliable one must make an arbitrary decision to do so. No matter where you take the base on which you build an argument the question "Why should I not pick another base" has always been askable as far as I can see. — khaled
You cannot deny the existence of experience (without being logically inconsistent at least) but you CAN deny certain aspects of it with your choosing. For example, schizophrenics deny the existence of their experiences regularly. — khaled
No. You can deny anything you please, verbally. But to deny any experience whatsoever is to abuse the language, and thus meaningless. On the basis of (other) experience — unenlightened
You cannot deny the existence of experience (without being logically inconsistent at least) — khaled
You have to do a bit more than "verbally" deny something in the case of pain. I'm pretty sure the guy tiptoeing on the spike bed is doing a bit more than "verbally" denying pain. He is actually no longer experiencing it — khaled
Anyone who denies experience then, is a maniac and not worth talking to but only because I arbitrarily chose to employ logic. There is no logical reason for why I or any other employer of logic does this. — khaled
I agree, he's no longer experiencing it. So he's not denying an experience. What he is doing is what the schizophrenic cannot do, and you are pretending cannot be done, clearly distinguishing subjective from objective. And then he controls his subjectivity — unenlightened
Logic is simply the way we use language to talk sense. — unenlightened
any distinction you come up with between those ways cannot be labeled objective — khaled
Inaccessible and non-existent are two quite different things. :chin: — Pattern-chaser
Yes the belief is that it is non-existent or if it existent that it is inaccessible. There has been no proof that an objective value/knowledge/morality exists and so claiming that they do not should be rational in the same way that I can say "The flying spaghetti monster doesn't exist". Obviously, it COULD exist but since there is no proof people would just say it doesn't — khaled
But the problem is that you seem to deny that anything is objective, in if that is the case, then nothing is distinguished from anything else, — unenlightened
It is as if you want to say that 'objectively, nothing is objective', and that is a simple contradiction. — unenlightened
I'm fine with the possibility of an objective morality existing just haven't found proof yet — khaled
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