To be is to be perceived. I perceive a rock, so it exists. But it doesn't exist outside being perceive. I perceive you so, so you exist, at least while I'm perceiving you. — Marchesk
That doesn't follow. "To be is to be perceived" is not the same as "to be is to be perceived by me". The rock doesn't require that I perceive it. — Michael
But my knowledge of other minds comes from perception, just like my knowledge of rocks. So there is a skeptical problem for the idealist that the solipsist recognizes, and the idealist pretends isn't an issue. — Marchesk
Furthermore, the idealist doesn't even perceive the other minds, just their bodies. The other mind is a mental inference.
What's the sceptical problem? — Michael
The skeptical problem is how I can know you actually exist outside my mental model when I'm not perceiving you. The idealist solution is just to assert that of course other minds are around perceiving when I'm not perceiving them. Solipsism avoided. But it's just an assertion. There is no sound epistemological basis for that assertion. — Marchesk
To be is to be perceived. I perceive a rock, so it exists. But it doesn't exist outside being perceive. I perceive you so you exist, at least while I'm perceiving you. — Marchesk
Of course, some versions of idealism are looser stances where folks are simply emphasizing the importance of ideas. Those are a different issue. Those stances are not making exhaustive ontological inventory claims. — Terrapin Station
OK, so your explanation of idealism is that idealism is actually realism in that things continue to exist even when no mind is accessing it via the senses. It's just that the primary substance is mental rather than physical. Is every realist then a materialist or physicalist? Your definition seems to make idealism into realism with the only difference being the what the primary substance of reality is (and does this even matter the label we use in naming the primary substance if it follows scientific laws?)You can't equate idealism with solipsism. As we've gone over many times before, they're not the same thing. The idealist's position is that all things are mental in nature; it's not simply the position that all things are a product of one's own mind. There can be other minds, each with their own thoughts and experiences, that continue to exist even when you're dead. — Michael
OK, so your explanation of idealism is that idealism is actually realism in that things continue to exist even when no mind is accessing it via the senses. It's just that the primary substance is mental rather than physical. Is every realist then a materialist or physicalist? Your definition seems to make idealism into realism with the only difference being the what the primary substance of reality is (and does this even matter the label we use in naming the primary substance if it follows scientific laws?) — Harry Hindu
What about when you look in a mirror? Why is it that you don't see your own mind? Why do you see a body?
That doesn't follow. "To be is to be perceived" is not the same as "to be is to be perceived by me". The rock doesn't require that I perceive it. It exists if someone perceives it. — Michael
So then what is the medium in which these other minds exist? To say that other minds exist implies a separation of minds. What is it that divides minds apart from each other? What exists between minds if not a shared world? By using the term, "other", you automatically imply the existence of some medium that separates them.That's objective idealism, yes. But that's not what I meant. What I meant is that the (non-objective and non-solipsistic) idealist can accept that only minds exist without having to accept that only one's own mind exists. So you exist and I exist and seven billion other people exist, all with our own independent thoughts and experiences (but which are able to causally influence one another), but that a material world of trees and rocks does not exist independently of anyone experiencing them. — Michael
My point was that you don't see other minds, only other bodies.Seeing a body is just the occurrence of mental phenomena. It's a bundle of qualia that is then interpreted as being a single object (in the same sort of way that the materialist will say that a bundle of subatomic particles is interpreted as being a single object). — Michael
My point was that you don't see other minds, only other bodies. — Harry Hindu
By using the term, "other", you automatically imply the existence of some medium that separates them.
Then you don't need to see other trees for there to be other trees. This is why the idealist is inconsistent until he follows his own arguments where they lead - to solipsism.And my point is that it doesn't matter. I don't need to see other minds for there to be other minds. The idealist's claim isn't simply "only the things I see exist". Rather it's "only mental phenomena exists", with us seeing bodies being the occurrence of a particular type of mental phenomena. — Michael
Like I said, use of the term, "other" implies the existence of something to separate these things. If I don't use the term "other" in describing a world, then I'm not implying a 4th thing to separate worlds. It is you using the term other to describe minds. No one has used the term, "other" to describe worlds. If they did then they'd have to explain what it is that separates worlds. But no one has, so your point is ridiculous.No I don't. That one thing is not another thing does not require some third thing to separate them. Else what fourth thing separates this third thing from the first two things? And so on. — Michael
Wheeler conjectures we are part of a universe that is a work in progress; we are tiny patches of the universe looking at itself — and building itself. It's not only the future that is still undetermined but the past as well. And by peering back into time, even all the way back to the Big Bang, our present observations select one out of many possible quantum histories for the universe.
Then you don't need to see other trees for there to be other trees. — Harry Hindu
The only mental phenomenon you have access to is your own. How do you know that other mental phenomenon exists besides yours?
And then how is your answer not also applicable to other things, like trees and forests?
And for the umpteenth time, there needs to be a consistent shared world for you to mean anything when you use the term, "other", or else there isn't other minds, only one mind.The idealist doesn't claim otherwise. They just claim that trees need to be seen for there to be trees. It doesn't require that I'm the one doing the seeing. For the umpteenth time, there's a difference between "to be is to be perceived" and "to be is to be perceived by me". — Michael
There must be something else because I don't direct access to your mind. There is some barrier preventing me from accessing your mind. I can only access it indirectly through your posts or seeing your person. Again, for me to believe there are other minds means I must also believe in something separating them that isn't a mind.For the same reason that the materialist's answer isn't applicable to other things like magic or souls or eldritch abominations. That there's evidence for other minds is not prima facie that there's evidence for something else, i.e. a non-mental substance that constitutes a world of objects that exists independently of anyone seeing them. — Michael
The idealist doesn't claim otherwise. They just claim that trees need to be seen for there to be trees. It doesn't require that I'm the one doing the seeing. For the umpteenth time, there's a difference between "to be is to be perceived" and "to be is to be perceived by me". — Michael
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