Because the world around me is constituted by my own perceptions/conscious experience. — dukkha
Maybe there is a world around you and there is also your perception of the world that is different from the world itself. Isn't it a reasonable view? — Babbeus
Maybe there is a world around you and there is also your perception of the world that is different from the world itself. Isn't it a reasonable view? — Babbeus
Perception is going to be different than the world around you in that the world around you isn't perception — Terrapin Station
You might say that's fine, that other consciousness exist in an external world beyond your perception. But this position requires some strange relationship between the bodies around you and conscious experiences which exist in the external world. Strange relationship as in, eg, another person wills his arm to move in his own represented world, and somehow this causes the persons arm you see in front of you move in a correlated way. Likewise there's this sort of strange correlation between all his other behaviors he does in his represented world and the person you see in front of you. I don't know how this relationship would work? — dukkha
So the colors in the world around you continue to still look the same even when nobody is looking at them? — dukkha
If logically coherent hypotheses for both is presented, how, in principle, can dispute about whether experience is caused by interaction with an alleged external reality, or is entirely subjective possibly be resolved? — Brainglitch
Isn't this exactly why solipsism is notoriously impossible to refute? — Real Gone Cat
What would these reasons possibly be, other than speculative hypotheses unencumbered by empirical evidence?I would think the first step would be to survey the reasons we have for believing one thing or another. Logical coherency certainly isn't all there is to reasons for believing things. — Terrapin Station
What would these reasons possibly be, other than speculative hypotheses unencumbered by empirical evidence? — Brainglitch
- Terrapin StationThe negation of solipsism is just as impossible to refute.
True, but the negation of solipsism was not in question. The existence of other minds was in doubt - which is tantamount to solipsism - and by pointing out that solipsism cannot be refuted, I was lending support to the OP. If the existence of other minds could be established, then solipsism would be refuted. — Real Gone Cat
And what is not experienced does not exist, does it? — Real Gone Cat
And what is not experienced does not exist, does it? — Real Gone Cat
Why would you believe that? — Terrapin Station
Because the world around me is constituted by my own perceptions/conscious experience. So I'd be locating a whole another conscious experience within my conscious experience. — dukkha
... as long as you allow that there is something real outside you, then this reality acts to separate what's within you from what's within others. It is only if you insist that there is absolutely nothing outside of your own conscious experience, that you would have the problem which you describe. But why would you think that your conscious experience comprises all that is? — Metaphysician Undercover
So long as you allow that there is a real separation between you and others, there is no such problem. The world around you is not constituted by your own perceptions. Your perceptions are within you, and as long as you allow that there is something real outside you, then this reality acts to separate what's within you from what's within others. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is only if you insist that there is absolutely nothing outside of your own conscious experience, that you would have the problem which you describe. But why would you think that your conscious experience comprises all that is? — Metaphysician Undercover
Ah, but then you are a physicalist. I suspect dukkha is not. And therein lies the rub. — Real Gone Cat
Since other consciousnesses cannot be experienced, it is logical to doubt their existence. Sure, I experience qualia suggestive of other minds - text on a screen, voices, the movement of other bodies, etc. - but these may be nothing more than illusions produced by Descartes' demon. Or the actions of a clever computer program. The existence of other minds can never be more than speculative. — Real Gone Cat
Okay but what we humans want to say and believe, is that the people we interact with in the world we perceive have conscious experiences. It is the actual people around us that are conscious, and not say, that the people around us are internal representations of conscious people in the world beyond my conscious experience. It is the people that I see which are conscious, but it's hard to reconcile this because the people that I see and interact with are *within* my conscious experience (the people I see are within my conscious experience of a visual field). — dukkha
The trouble is that if other people's bodies are objects which I perceive, then it doesn't make sense to locate the other persons conscious experience within that object. — dukkha
I believe this problem arises *because* I am conceiving of other people's bodies as if they are much like the other objects I experience in the world around me. As in, other peoples's bodies is the object which the biologist describes - a combination of physiological processes, or a collection of organs, a thing comprised of flesh, blood, and organs. Or even how the physicist describes, an object with mass, dimensions, etc. People's bodies must exist in a fundamentally different way than objects in the world like cars, cups, or roast legs of lamb (which *are* like the biologist describes - an object of flesh, bone, and blood, a mass of cells). It's as if, for the people around me to be conscious, they must be separate from my conscious experience (other people's conscious experience is not located inside my own), and yet other people's bodies are within my conscious experience (I see them, I feel them, etc).
So if people's bodies are not the objects described by biologists, what are they? — dukkha
Since other consciousnesses cannot be experienced, it is logical to doubt their existence. — Real Gone Cat
The existence of other minds can never be more than speculative. — Real Gone Cat
I am not a solipsist. I believe that the people I perceive and interact with are conscious. — dukkha
Other human bodies are objects in the world around me. It makes no sense to locate another consciousness within the objects in the world around me (as in, "the people around me have conscious experiences). Because the world around me is constituted by my own perceptions/conscious experience. So I'd be locating a whole another conscious experience within my conscious experience. So for example, this would be like seeing someone in front of me and imagining a visual perception of a world being located in some way within that person (eg, within their head), or even in front of that person. Either way you're locating a visual field within a visual field. This makes no sense because my visual field would then be located within their visual field, which contradicts with my location of theirs within my own.
And so the people around me don't have conscious experiences? — dukkha
for an analogy to be an an analogy it must be restricted to external comparisons that are empirically sensible, — sime
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