Could one argue that abstract things have their own independent existence? — 3017amen
You seem to be confusing subjective concepts with physical objects. In the typical bar magnet illustration of a magnetic fleld, you never sense the field itself, only its effect on iron filings. — Gnomon
In other words, we see reality in the form of as-if ideas, not as-is matter & energy. — Gnomon
so the reality of the objects absolutely must be different.
— Mww
That's why I make a pragmatic distinction between Reality (sensory) and Ideality (mental). — Gnomon
you need to explain what do you assume the word “existence” means by specifying your definition — Zelebg
Scientists typically try to limit experience to Empirical or A Posteriori Knowledge gained from sensory impressions. But Philosophers and Theologians often include Theoretical or A Priori (tautological) knowledge in their discussions of Consciousness — Gnomon
The confounding problem here is that human beings are capable of acting as-if concepts that exist only in the mind (e.g. fictional characters) are real. — Gnomon
Mww
There’s no profit in thinking experience is something that exists.
Can you summarize what argument you are having...... — Zelebg
........and what is the point you're making? — Zelebg
if I experience something that you don't, how then do I know it exists (...) Said another way, how does one know if that experience exists if one doesn't experience it himself? — 3017amen
Either you are misusing probabilities or you are being unreasonable. — SophistiCat
Do you believe him based on that message? — Wheatley
Why couldn't we just not assign probability in that case? Leave it as an unknown probability. — Wheatley
Not sure if we can estimate the probability that your friend is lying — Wheatley
I am arguing that it's logically impossible ( driving and not driving at the same time) — 3017amen
The A and -A issue, is occurring in one's mind. — 3017amen
My question remains; how can consciousness be logically possible (?). — 3017amen
Well your point is very well taken! — 3017amen
If A and -A holds ( law of non-contradiction/LEM ), one could reasonably conclude that consciousness is logically impossible. — 3017amen
They are not aware that there are not aware. How can that be? — 3017amen
I haven't checked to see where that other thread was located. — 3017amen
I would just caution against splitting semantic hairs. — 3017amen
When someone shuffles a deck of cards and deals you the first twenty cards, the probability of getting those specific cards is extremely unlikely. — Wheatley
Hence their driving but not driving. — 3017amen
But one does not know the difference. All the person knows is he or she is in another reality..... — 3017amen
So you intend a falsification of A = A, insofar as some occasions permit A = not-A? I submit that if you’re daydreaming you’re not driving
— Mww
Mww, precisely! As far as our consciousness is concerned, we are not driving, which is why we have the potential to crash and kill ourselves. Cognitive science says that our subconscious is driving. Hence, I'm driving and not driving at the same time. Therefore, consciousness is beyond our logical understanding. — 3017amen
If you grant reason is un-mystic, yet allow for its complement (....), then you are a dualist. But a dualist is a small kind of pluralist, so maybe you’re ok.
— Mww
A dualism between rational thought and feeling? — Janus
our propensity for reification so easily allows to become manifest in many forms of faux-determinate transcendence. — Janus
Driving a vehicle daydreaming and thus having an accident suggest s I'm driving and not driving at the same time. — 3017amen
I agree that there are metaphysical truths that are necessary. In consciousness examples would be our sense of wonder, intuition, love, sentience and other various forms of qualia. — 3017amen
The closest we get to a posteriori truth 's in this context, is once again, the synthetic a priori; all events must have a cause. — 3017amen
What is true nature of consciousness (?). — 3017amen
it behooves us to acknowledge that the map or model is not the territory — Janus
allow for the mystic tides of unreason. — Janus
I'd say we cannot prove anything at all, except in relative contexts. — Janus
So at least one abstract, mathematical object is definitely real: the concrete, physical world. If that's the case, then like with modal realism, which addresses why the actual world exists instead of some other possible world by assuming all possible worlds exist and "the actual" world is just the one we're in, likewise we can dissolve a lot of philosophical questions about why the concrete world follows the mathematical laws that it does by assuming that all mathematical structures exists, and "the concrete" world is just the mathematical structure of which we're a part. — Pfhorrest
I think the dichotomy rears its head when we try to reconcile a priori truth's with a posteriori truth's. Meaning the fact that a priori/mathematical truth's describe the physical universe (a posteriori/cause and effect) so effectively, remains an unsolved mystery of sorts. — 3017amen
mathematical primitives - integers I presume - 'exist independently from anyone's understanding of them', (...) I presume the same applies to e.g. Pythagoras' theorem, the law the excluded middle, f=ma and many other such principles. — Wayfarer
Reason is able to discern these principles — Wayfarer
Besides humans are not really outside of, or apart from, nature. (This insight originates with non-dualism). — Wayfarer
Whereas now 'understanding' is seen merely as adaptation and is devoid of any purpose save that of survival and instrumental utility. — Wayfarer
so thoroughly internalized the modern outlook that they've lost all sense of what is problematical about it. — Wayfarer
some "unexpected" discovery of wide consequences is needed for further progress. — Zelebg
The reason I mentioned that passage is because there is an arguable similarity between the Kantian transcendental ego and the Vedantic 'atman'. — Wayfarer
But, the rationalist’s claims appear incompatible with an understanding of human beings as physical creatures whose capacities for learning are exhausted by our physical bodies.' — Wayfarer
But, our best epistemic theories seem to debar any knowledge of mathematical objects.' — Wayfarer
numbers and so on are not actually objects at all, they’re intelligible ideas. They’re an aspect of reason. So I don't accept the idea that information constitutes the world or physical objects. — Wayfarer
the Functioner in every respect through the senses or the mind or the intellect is the ātman. (...) Everything assumes a meaning because of the operation of this ātman in everything. Minus that, nothing has any sense.
might be the same thing. One way to think of the residue of reality is intuitions, which are the contents of consciousness in some epistemological methodologies.basic Residue of Reality in every individual
I believe that that number is 'real but incorporeal', hence showing that materialism is false. But the philosophical implications are very tricky. — Wayfarer
I am not talking about the subject in the contents of the experience — Zelebg
subject outside of the experience which is subjected to experience that experience. — Zelebg
This subject is the subject per se, and it is the only mystery here — Zelebg
