That you ask a question implies that there are folk to ask that question of; that you use language implies that you are part of a language community.
And since eagles, turtles, bees and shrimp see more and different colours than humans do, their reality is different from ours.
Yep. As your asking me that very question implies that you understood my post and what to do about it. Doubt sits in a background of certainty. That's a step beyond the insincere affectation, into the nature of discourse.Does it? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Maybe you were tricked by a demon. — frank
See, this is what I'm saying. We need the modal equivalent to Moore's hand argument in order to refute claims like that. "Maybe such and such ..." Well it depends on what such and such is, in each case. Maybe I was tricked by a demon? No, demons don't exist. Why not? Here's a hand, mate, ask a scientist.
Does that do anything for you, or should I excuse myself on the way out? — Arcane Sandwich
I don't need more certainty than what comes naturally. I'm fine with the possibility that I've been tricked by a demon. Why do you need to conquer that doubt? — frank
Honesty is fine. — frank
Did someone suggest that?What I am doubting is that it is a logical impossibility for language to exist in the case of solipsism. — Count Timothy von Icarus
That you ask a question implies that there are folk to ask that question of; that you use language implies that you are part of a language community.
all I can say is that it would bring me much mental comfort, if I could just see an elegant argument, preferably in ordinary language, that shows how it would be impossible (in the modal sense) for demons to exist. — Arcane Sandwich
What reason do you have for assuming that we can ever know the ultimate truth about reality? — RussellA
It is a commonplace, legitimate, and useful metaphysical position that an objective reality doesn't exist. From that point of view, there is no ultimate truth about reality. — T Clark
But I wonder also whether the quest to identify the 'really real' might not just be a secular replacement for god. — Tom Storm
My senses can deceive me, so if I cannot trust my senses, I might as well conclude that outside reality doesn't exist; It's just me and you; but if my senses cannot be always trusted then your existence must also might be an illusion. — A Realist
If someone were to craft such an argument, that person should be regarded as being very intelligent, and noble. That person should be awarded the logical equivalent to the Fields medal. It would be one of humanity's most resounding moral victories over ignorance and superstition. Something like that would have enormous value. It would be at the level of Beethoven's Ode to Joy. — Arcane Sandwich
And since eagles, turtles, bees and shrimp see more and different colours than humans do, their reality is different from ours.
Well, their experiences would be different. Their reality? Is what you've said about turtles and bees really true? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.