• Clearbury
    207
    Mind without physical body assumption is not simpler than mind with body, because you must explain on how the mind ended up with no body. How can mind operate without body is far more complicated than starting with mind with body which is empirically and logically natural and sound.Corvus

    I think you have missed the point. Posits are not expalined, that's what makes them posits. Positing two things is more complicated than positing one, other things being equal. thus, I posit one thing - a mind - and I see how far I can go with it.

    Whether the mind is a material or immaterial thing is actually beside the point. If you posit a material mind then you have not explained it, but posited it. If you posit an immaterial mind then you have not explained it but posited it. If you posit non-mental material things then you have posited them and not explained them. And so on.
  • Clearbury
    207
    that it is psychologically impossible to believe,Richard B

    That seems false and also not to provide us with a reason to think it solipsism false.

    It is not psychologically impossible to believe that you are the only mind in existence. It may not be a very reasonable view - though that's what is at issue - but there is nothing impossible about it. If you are in any doubt about this, just imagine what you'd believe if you woke up as the sole survivor of a nuclear holocaust. You'd believe you're the only mind in existence. That's to believe solipsism is true. It's entirely psychologically possible to believe it, then.

    But more importantly, being psychologically incapable of beileving something is not evidence that the proposition in question is false. I find myself psychologically incapable of believing I will die. But that is not evidence I am immortal.

    I once received a letter from an eminent logician, Mrs. Christine Ladd-Franklin, saying that she was a solipsist, and was surprised that there were no others. Coming from a logician and a solipsist, her surprise surprised meRichard B

    All that quote from Russell does is reveal how illogical Mrs Christine Ladd-Franklin is. That is, it reveals that she's not very good at understanding the implications of a thesis - which is surprising in a logician. Russell is making fun of Ladd-Franklin, not making fun of solipsism.
  • Paine
    2.5k
    The point, though, is that solipsism has a very long and well established meaning:Clearbury

    Then cite some passages from those who use it without relation to the isolation of the individual.
  • Clearbury
    207
    I asked you kindly not to do what you are now doing.
  • Paine
    2.5k

    My challenge is simple. I will not withdraw it.
    But I will leave the discussion, upon your request.
    Fare forward, as Eliot said.
  • jkop
    923
    But how can something unextended 'expand'?Clearbury

    When one instance of the extended universe collapses into an unextended nothingness, the following compression of all remaining energy and forces causes an explosion (big bang), and the explosion creates a new instance of extension. When it cools down, atoms begin to form, followed by the compounds of matter and things.
  • Clearbury
    207
    But only something that occupies some space can expand, as there needs to be the space it occupies and then expands into. So something that is not extended in space is not capable of 'expanding' except in some metaphorical sense.

    I think this is all beside the main point though. The solipsist evolutionary theory posits one kind of a thing (a mind) and one disposition (the disposition to create a similar mental state to the one it is originally in) and gets everything out of that. I still do not see how an alternative that starts with something else is going to be able to explain as much with as little.
  • Corvus
    3.4k
    I think you have missed the point. Posits are not expalined, that's what makes them posits. Positing two things is more complicated than positing one, other things being equal. thus, I posit one thing - a mind - and I see how far I can go with it.Clearbury

    Your idea of mind seem to be coming from some sort of dualism. That's fine. But my idea of mind is based on the mind as a function of body. That means mind without body is impossible. As soon as body dies, mind dies also by necessity.

    In this situation, the question naturally arises, and need to be explained i.e. how mind can exist and operate without body. This is a quite complicated process I would imagine.

    If the mind without body arguments keeps going on without clearing the inevitable question first, then it would sound like a paranormal rants. We want to avoid that.
  • jkop
    923
    But only something that occupies some space can expand, as there needs to be the space it occupies and then expands into.Clearbury

    Unlike a balloon, the universe has no outside into which it can expand. It creates the space.

    solipsist evolutionary theory posits one kind of a thing (a mind) and one disposition (the disposition to create a similar mental state to the one it is originally in) and gets everything out of that. I still do not see how an alternative that starts with something else is going to be able to explain as much with as little.Clearbury

    The problem is that you don't explain anything, you only say that you do, while dismissing and ignoring the objections. That's disingenuous.
  • Clearbury
    207
    The issue does not seem to be what kind of a thing the mind is. It does not matter for simplicity's sake whether minds are material or immaterial. What make the thesis simple is that only one kind of a thing is posited - whatever kind of a thing a mind is - and only one instance of that kind of thing is posited.
  • Clearbury
    207
    Unlike a balloon, the universe has no outside into which it can expand. It creates the space.jkop

    I can make no sense of that. You haven't explained how something non-physical can expand. Something cannot expand if there is no space for it to expand into. And space cannot expand unless there is space for it to expand into.

    As I say, you are either using the word 'expand' in some metaphorical sense, or you mean it literally, but it you mean it literally then you are just talking about material entities and the space they occupy.

    The issue here is simplicity. The thesis I have put forward is simple. To challenge that claim of mine, one would need to argue that there is an 'as' simple thesis that does just as good a job at explaining everything.

    I don't think there is. Note what you have to do. You have to posit one thing. Just one. And you have to attribute to it one simple disposition. Just one. And you have to attribute to it one state. From those elements, you need to derive everything else. The solipsist evolutionary theory I have proposed does that. It explains how experiences of the kind I am currently having could have arisen given just those three elements: one thing, one state of that thing, and one disposition.
  • Corvus
    3.4k
    The issue does not seem to be what kind of a thing the mind is. It does not matter for simplicity's sake whether minds are material or immaterial. What make the thesis simple is that only one kind of a thing is posited - whatever kind of a thing a mind is - and only one instance of that kind of thing is posited.Clearbury

    Another problem with disembodied mind is that, it is devoid of all the sensory perceptions, which is the source of thoughts, feelings and sensations on the external world. It has no linguistic apparatus either which is closely linked to logic and reasoning. All it could do is dreaming, but dreaming is only possible via brain. With no bodily organs available to the mind, we wonder how it could even dream, imagine or even have illusions and hallucination.

    The OP title says it is "an evolutionary defense", hence some counter arguments is being presented against the OP's assumptions.
  • Clearbury
    207
    Another problem with disembodied mind is that, it is devoid of all the sensory perceptions, which is the source of thoughts, feelings and sensations on the external world.Corvus

    What's being posited is a mind that is in a mental state - so, whatever total mental mental state you are in now (including all experiential states), just assume the mind is in it.

    There is no need to assume that the mind has a physical substratum. To think you do have to make that assumption is already to have assumed physicalism. And whether physicalism is true is the issue.

    So, just assume a mind in a mental state. Now assume the mind has one disposition: to put itself in a mental state that closely resembles the one it is already in. So, its disposition is just to replicate the state it is in but it makes small changes every time it does this. That gets the job done. That's what this is (or could be).
  • wonderer1
    2.2k
    What's being posited is a mind that is in a mental state - so, whatever total mental mental state you are in now (including all experiential states), just assume the mind is in it.Clearbury

    So whence comes a theory of evolution worth considering in light of this posit?
  • Clearbury
    207
    Admittedly, my theory has changed slightly as it is now simpler than the original.

    But the original evolutionary story involves random mental state generation and a mind disposed to remember sequences of mental states that seem closely to resemble one another. It experiences A. Then later it experiences - by random (and with enough time this would happen, of course) - B, a state that seems very similar to A. This it remembers and is now disposed, should it ever experience A again, to experience B following it, as it has a disposition to recall what it has remembered.

    Eventually B will be experienced being followed by C, a state that closely resembles it. And now the sequence A, B C is remembered and should the mind ever experience A again - which it will given enough time, it will experience A, B, C. And so on.

    In this way a potentially infinite sequence of closely resembling states can evolve. And the idea is that this is what 'this' is.

    But now I have simplified it further. The standard theory of evolution has physical things replicating themselves with random mutations. Ok, so i will simply posit a mind that is disposed to replicate its initial mental state but with random changes. And that is what this is. That's simpler still. Both theories are simpler than the standard evolutionary alternatives, but the latest is the simplest of all and it seems to get the job done by positing one mind, one initial state of that mind, and one disposition.
  • wonderer1
    2.2k
    Admittedly, my theory has changed slightly as it is now simpler than the original.

    But the original evolutionary story involves random mental state generation and a mind disposed to remember sequences of mental states that seem closely to resemble one another. It experiences A.
    Clearbury

    The biological theory of evolution is based on all sort of empirical evidence. Is empirical evidence for your theory of evolution even possible in principal?
  • Janus
    16.5k
    All that quote from Russell does is reveal how illogical Mrs Christine Ladd-Franklin is. That is, it reveals that she's not very good at understanding the implications of a thesis - which is surprising in a logician. Russell is making fun of Ladd-Franklin, not making fun of solipsism.Clearbury

    Your definition of solipsism equates to eastern philosophies such as Brahmanism and mind only Buddhism and Western philosophies such as Neoplatonism. In their various ways they posit that there is only one mind and that the supposed existence of many minds is an illusion. On that view Ladd-Franklin is not being illogical at all. It is only in relation to the standard solipsism which says that only my mind exists and that all you others are mere projections of my mind that she is being illogical.
  • Clearbury
    207
    It's based on simplicity. Both theories are explaining the same data - the empirical data. But the standard evolutionary theory posits lots and lots of replicating and randomly mutating entities, wheres my theory posits one mind replicating and randomly mutating its mental state.
  • Clearbury
    207
    On that view Ladd-Franklin is not being illogical at all. It is only in relation to the standard solipsism which says that only my mind exists and that all you others are mere projections of my mind that she is being illogical.Janus

    She is being illogical as solipsism is the view that only one mind exists. So a person who thinks it is surprising that there are not other persons who are solipsists is being illogical, as by hypothesis there can only ever be one solipsist if solipsism is true.
  • Janus
    16.5k
    She is being illogical as solipsism is the view that only one mind exists. So a person who thinks it is surprising that there are not other persons who are solipsists is being illogical, as by hypothesis there can only ever be one solipsist if solipsism is true.Clearbury

    No, you are still missing the point. If there is only one mind and that mind belongs to just one person (which in this case would be the woman in question) then on the face of it what you say might be true. But if there is only one mind and that mind is god or brahman or some kind of universal or collective mind and we are all illusory separate minds then, in that case, you could logically have many solipsists who would all be wrong if they though they were uniquely the one true mind.

    Even positing ordinary solipsism, you can have as many solipsists as you like but only one can be the one true mind and thus be correct in their solipsism. All the others would be mistaken.
  • Corvus
    3.4k
    So, just assume a mind in a mental state. Now assume the mind has one disposition: to put itself in a mental state that closely resembles the one it is already in. So, its disposition is just to replicate the state it is in but it makes small changes every time it does this. That gets the job done. That's what this is (or could be).Clearbury

    What is the purpose for doing this? What is the solipsism trying to prove?
  • Clearbury
    207
    No, for solipsism - as I keep saying - is the thesis that only one mind exists. That's certainly how Russell was understanding the term (else his joke makes no sense) and how he was assuming everyone else understood the term and how I am using the term.

    Note: the idea that there is only one mind and that there are also lots of mind is straightforwardly contradictory. It does not answer to the meaning of the word 'solipsism' and it is not coherent. It's also clearly not what I am talking about or what Russell is talking about.

    I don't think I can discuss this with you any longer. If you want to insist upon understanding the term solipsism incorrectly, that is entirely up to you. But I am not interested in discussing matters further with someone who insists upon using terms incorrectly as you're just going to keep strawmaning the view I am trying to defend, which is tedious.
  • Clearbury
    207
    What is the purpose for doing this? What is the solipsism trying to prove?Corvus

    My purpose is to try and figure out what's going on. And 'solipsism' isn't trying to prove anything. It's a thesis. I am the prover. And I'm not really trying to 'prove' it, just show that it is a simpler thesis than its nearest rival. Whether that proves it - that is, puts its truth beyond all reasonable doubt - is another matter, as simplicity is only one epistemic virtue not all of them.
  • Janus
    16.5k
    Is the one mind yours or mine or both? Is it a universal mind of which we are all part?

    Of course if there is only one mind the idea that there are many minds is an illusion.
  • Clearbury
    207
    At this point I think you're not really interested in listening to what I have to say, as I have already told you numerous times - and in the opening post - what the term solipsism is being used to refer to. As I say, I really am not interested in discussing things with someone who is hellbent on mischaracterizing the view I am defending.
  • Janus
    16.5k
    I really am not interested in discussing things with someone who is hellbent on mischaracterizing the view I am defending.Clearbury

    That's up to you of course. But I'm not interested in mischaracterizing your view of solipsism, but in understanding what it consists in. So far, I don't understand your understanding of solipsism.
  • Corvus
    3.4k
    My purpose is to try and figure out what's going on. And 'solipsism' isn't trying to prove anything. It's a thesis. I am the prover. And I'm not really trying to 'prove' it, just show that it is a simpler thesis than its nearest rival. Whether that proves it - that is, puts its truth beyond all reasonable doubt - is another matter, as simplicity is only one epistemic virtue not all of them.Clearbury

    Why not solipsism with the mind in a body, or mind and body? You keep emphasising on simplicity, but simplicity can degenerate into the vacuous assertions.
  • Clearbury
    207
    Your question answers itself. It is simpler to suppose a mind to exist by itself than it is to suppose it exists in a body, for then you're not assuming a body too.
  • Corvus
    3.4k
    The question does not answer itself. It implies that mind without body is an unintelligible assumption, which generates the vacuous assertion. It asks if solipsism would make more sense if it assumed mind in body.
  • Clearbury
    207
    I do not follow you. I am positing one kind of thing - a mind - and one instance of it.

    Now, it is clearly conceivable that minds can exist without any material entities existing. There is nothing incoherent in the idea.

    But even if minds can't exist without a material entity existing, that doesn't affect my case, as I'm still only positing one kind of thing and one instance of it.

    Whether minds can exist apart from material bodies or not is a red herring. The issue is whether, by just positing one mind in one kind of mental state and with one disposition, we can get the work done of explaining all else. That's the issue.
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