[...] although my mind is in my head, my head is in my mind, and although my head is in my mind, my mind is in my head. This is a "strange loop" structure that has instances in a number of disciplines ranging from music to the visual arts, to computer science. Schopenhauer revels in presence in the field of metaphysics, in connection with the relationship of mutual containment that obtains between materialism and idealism. — Robert L. Wicks
But, taking, for example, quantum mechanics and the observer effect, you have this relationship existing in nature. Take the wave-particle duality as another example. — Wallows
Clearly we can say that your brain is in your head, but not that your head is in your brain. — Janus
Does that mean its existence is dependent upon your experience of it? — Janus
Second: the ideas of mind and and matter (head) have to be carefully defined and laid out. Michelangelo's David, for example, is just stone, yes? The mind, then, that rises out of matter is just matter, yes? — tim wood
And your author's "strange loop structure" seems language on holiday. Until and unless you can add more of Wick's idea that develops it a bit more, I'm compelled to dismiss it for lack of substance (for the moment). — tim wood
The result of Schopenhauer's discussion is to indicate that the inner nature of the world, or thing - in - itself, transcends the division between subject and object, along with the ceaseless transformation - like traveling along the surface of a Mobius strip - between subjective and objective standpoints inherent in the above antinomy. The inner nature of the world is the ground of the subject - object distinction itself, and is not accessible through proofs or assertions of necessary connection of any kind, whether the connections obtain between concepts, material objects, mathematical or geometrical entities, or personal spiritual entities. Schopenhauer consequently maintains that the thing - in - itself, is toto genere different from representations and the world of representations. If one is to gain access and it will not involve any forms of the principle of sufficient reason. — Robert L. Wicks
Are you sure? Then how or why would you suppose that sentience or consciousness is made of stone, flesh, brain matter, or any matter at all? I think the roots of the question are choked by confusion about terms and the failure to, if not understand the terms, at the least to define them for the purpose of the discussion. There is also the blending of considerations based in science and in philosophy, without of course making the effort to do make the preparatory - propaedeutic - study needed in order for what follows it to make sense.Yes, but, for the sake of discussion we are talking about sentience or consciousness. — Wallows
Schopenhauer consequently maintains that the thing - in - itself, is toto genere different from representations and the world of representations. If one is to gain access and it will not involve any forms of the principle of sufficient reason. — Robert L. Wicks
But other observers exist independent of your experience of them. Where do they exist relative to your mind? If they are seperate minds then that implies some kind of medium where minds exist which would be the shared world. What seperates minds from each other?Yes, it is. Again, the subject/object divide crops up and is in a constant state of perpetuity when we have an observer observing their own behavior. — Wallows
Are you claiming to have even any understanding of the second of Wick's paragraphs you've troubled to provide If you do, you're a better man than I am. My impression at the moment is that he must be being paid by a combination of syllables per word, obscurity, nonsense, and the density thereof. — tim wood
Now this I think I understand: it amounts to this: your idea of a brick is not a brick, and if you want access to the brick (in itself as it is in itself), it won't involve the principle that "nothing is, without reason." — tim wood
But other observers exist independent of your experience of them. Where do they exist relative to your mind? If they are seperate minds then that implies some kind of medium where minds exist which would be the shared world. What seperates minds from each other? — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that minds are objects themselves. You are your mind that exists relative to me. You are nothing more than another object that I can interact with both physically and mentally. — Harry Hindu
So, this would apply to everything, then. — Janus
You seem to be saying that the existence of anything and everything depends upon our experience of it. — Janus
If it is right, then you are some kind of idealist or anti-realist. — Janus
Under Schopenhauer's understanding, mind as primary subjects, that can perceive themselves as only subjects. This is where the loop between subjectivity and objectivity arises. I'm still reading along here and can say that the chief element that Schopenhauer mentions is the unclearness of the will of the Will. In some sense, it is a noumena or thing in itself. I'll come back later as I progress through the book. — Wallows
although my mind is in my head, my head is in my mind, — Robert L. Wicks
So, how does anyone interpret this Mobius strip constructed and explained by Schopenhauer of the mutual relationship between mind and matter — Wallows
I think, Harry Hindu indicated that indirect realism might be more appropriate here. What do you think? :) — Wallows
I don't think indirect realism is equivalent to idealism, because idealism, in one way or another, claims that everything is fundamentally mind, whereas indirect realism does not necessarily make any claim about the ultimate constitution of things, but does assert that there is a mind-independent reality, that is reflected in our mind-dependent perceptions. — Janus
Yeah, its not that his head is in his mind. Its the idea of his head that is in his mind.Oops! No, his head isn't in his mind. — Terrapin Station
I think Wick's account is still valid — Wallows
Odd, though, that both of these guys acknowledged his respective philosophy was most likely beyond the general understanding of the crowd to which was explicitly directed, yet decried the method for teaching it to them. — Mww
You mean idealism is not necessarily at odds with indirect realism? Maybe Kant's Transcendental idealism could be reconciled with IR, I suppose. There certainly are 'realist' interpreters among the Kant scholars. — Janus
When does one ever reach an understanding of any particular philosopher — Wallows
If indirect realism isn't at odds with idealism then there would have to be something other than minds or ideas that separates minds. This would be the medium through which minds communicate - matter.Yes, I think indirect realism doesn't necessarily have to be at odds with transcendental idealism. How, I'm not quite sure. — Wallows
Do you think philosophy progresses in a dialectical manner? — Wallows
If indirect realism isn't at odds with idealism then there would have to be something other than minds or ideas that separates minds. This would be the medium through which minds communicate - matter. — Harry Hindu
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