The mind-body problem is precisely a problem, it is posed as a challenge for dualism, not something that dualism embraces. — SophistiCat
So I consider the mind-body problem a challenge for atheists or secularists (such as myself), more than a challenge to dualists. — Olivier5
What seems to be the problem? — Olivier5
It's unlikely you'll get a conversation. — bert1
I'm a monist but it's perfectly obvious, as you have pointed out, that the first challenge that a monist has to answer is: What is the explanation of the manifest duality that I see? — bert1
The Dao 道 (the “way”) gives birth to one.
One gives birth to Two,
Two gives birth to Three.. — Daodejing, Chap. 42
In my mind, a kind of stuff can be said to be fundamentally different from another IFF it is impossible to produce one from the other and/or vice versa (not even in theory) by re-arraging its components for instance. — Olivier5
E.g. since it is theoretically possible to change lead into gold, or clay into pot, or energy into matter, these two kinds of stuff are not fundamentally different. — Olivier5
“Hey guys, remember how we thought everything was ‘Hakuna Matata?’ Well, it turns out it’s just Matata.” — Pinprick
We are capable of imagining things that aren’t real — Pinprick
But who believes that these categories cannot interact? — SophistiCat
The mind-body problem is precisely a problem, it is posed as a challenge for dualism, not something that dualism embraces. — SophistiCat
Dualism, in its most general outlines, carves out a special and exceptional place for the mental in its ontology and metaphysics. This is sometimes referred to as mentalism. So the best case for monism that I can see is a straightforward rejection of mentalism and nothing more. — SophistiCat
The challenge could be put this way: "If there's no ghost of the universe, how come there's a ghost of us, human beings?" — Olivier5
The example I used was to illustrate how you can't explain what Hakuna Matata is. So you can't say "it was just Matata". We don't know what Hakuna Matata is. — khaled
But those things are always combinations of existing properties. Unicorns are horses with horns. We know what horns are and we know what horses are. We can't imagine entirely new properties. Like a new color. Or a new taste. — khaled
Electrons and protons have charges but a balanced atom doesn't. Oftentimes properties are lost when you go from the constituents to the system as a whole. — khaled
But who believes that these categories cannot interact? — SophistiCat
The people that proposed them, necessarily.The people that proposed them, necessarily. Or else what does "fundamentally" add to "fundamentally different"? My definition is that it means they cannot interact. — khaled
It is a challenge because it seems clear that incorporeal, immaterial stuff (minds) would have no way to interact with material stuff. It's not a solvable problem, just how long have people been trying to solve it. It's a problem that refutes the position. — khaled
Do you have a different definition? — khaled
The problem with dualism is that these categories are defined as fundamentally different. — khaled
We have a working definition of “physical” don’t we? — Pinprick
I don’t see why this is an issue. Why would the fundamental “thing” possess new properties? — Pinprick
singling out the mental as special and central to the conception of the whole world, while preserving a distinction between mental and non-mental. — SophistiCat
Yes, but how is that fundamental difference cached out? I don't think there is a single criterion, like causal interaction, on which dualists stake their worldview. And for the same reason, if one views monism simply as a denial of dualism(s), which I think is correct, then there isn't a clear-cut definition of what it is - just a general approach to seeing the world. — SophistiCat
On the epiphenomenalism thread weren't you the one that opposed the view because you thought that something that doesn't affect anything else, would not be detectible and wouldn't exist? — khaled
You can't imagine new properties. — khaled
But if we define physical so as to include X, Y, Z, A, B and C, there is nothing left for mental. Same with if we define mental to include all the properties. That's seems to me to be what physicalists and idealists are doing respectively. — khaled
Actually, immaterialism as a whole seems doesn’t seem like it could be derived from things that actually exist. — Pinprick
I would consider the concept of souls to be an exception — Pinprick
I feel like saying that there’s some thing, or some property of some thing, that doesn’t interact with physical material, and isn’t effected by the laws of physics would never be accepted by a physicalist. — Pinprick
That seems to be the line between physicalism and idealism. — Pinprick
There are multiple "kinds" of monists from idealists, to physicalists to materialists, to God knows what else. I think they're all the same, despite sparking such heated discussion (the first 2 especially). — khaled
Do you think that space and time are made of the same one stuff as apples and rocks? — Olivier5
Yes, actually. As is everything else. The "stuff" is merely differentiated, but fundamentally remains the same "stuff". A rock, space, time (arguably, time does not actually exist, it is a perceptive tool used by an observer, remove the observer and "time" is meaningless, ceasing to exist), a duck, this computer, all of it...same stuff, different packaging. — Book273
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