Immanuel Can wrote:Because you know, and I know, that ideas have NO physical properties...not mass, not volume, not temperature, not velocity...
You don't actually read my posts do you? All the things listed above, like ideas themselves, are properties and relationships of matter. So what is the mass, volume, temperature, and velocity of an apple's mass, volume, temperature, and velocity?
What other "physical" entity do you know that has absolutely no physical properties of its own?

Funny, you gave a nice list there just then. Don't read your own posts then either.
Wait... Barring any evidence one way or another, how is one choice more rational than one holding a complimentary view?
Barring any evidence,
neither would be rational. You need evidence and logic.[/quote]Your evidence so far is mere bafflement. You can't see how the simpler view can work. Also the denial of evidence to the contrary. I see plenty cherry picking going on. Good science that.
I think what you're trying to do is to appeal to something like Occam's Razor -- you seem to be repeating some sort of scaled-down, half-baked version of what he actually said.
He said that we ought not to multiply the means of explanation beyond necessity. In other words, he said that given two highly identical theories, one simple and one a bit more complex, and all things being equal, we ought to prefer the simpler version.
Adding an entire second ontology is considered multiplying the means. It is not a small additional complexity. No, I'm not offering that as proof, just a grounds for choice. You seem to be going for a disproof of my position, which thus takes on a burden.
Here's what it can be used for: if I have two views that are highly similar (for example, that lightning is caused by thermal fronts, on the one hand, and another view that says lightning is caused by thermal fronts plus unicorn rage) I can rule out the view that has the unnecessary additional element (unicorn rage) unless it can be shown that that element actually accounts for something necessary.
Unicorns make far more logical sense. I've argued for their existence. How is your separate ontology not naturalism plus a unicorn?
'Naturalism' is a good word for my stance on this point. It doesn't deny deeper levels the way 'materialism' does, and 'realism' isn't really a view, it is a modifier about something specific. I'm realistic about space, but idealistic about the X axis of space. You're a realist about immaterial mind. I dislike 'monism' because it is ambiguous, even though we've sort of said for this thread that nobody is talking about idealism with that word.
This is why one cannot weigh of Monism and Dualism, and say Monism wins simply by virtue of being more simple. Its simplicity would only be a virtue if it succeeds in comprehensively describing the phenomenon in question (consciousness), and the additional element posed by Dualism were verifiably extraneous.
Nonsense. This is only true if the dualistic view accomplished said comprehensive description. It does nothing of the sort. It just says it happens elsewhere. It's a cop out. It seems to be a necessity for the eternal life promised by some preists, so of course it is the assumed view, but that's not logical evidence. I think the priests gain benefit from a more aggressive telling of the story. Improbability of reward must be counterbalanced by ever more massive payoff. The lottery people know this. The average lottery ticket is worth about a tenth of what it costs, but that's not the part they advertise. I tell my children when I see tickets being sold: Those are people paying their stupid-tax. If you're not stupid, you don't have to pay it.
The Materialist can meet neither of those challenges -- he's begging the question of what consciousness is, while we have every reason to doubt his explanation is comprehensive; and he cannot begin to show that the additional element posed by Dualism ("mind" for example) is truly extraneous. So in no way is Monism preferable to Dualism by way of Occam's Razor or anything else.
It isn't begging if it is the premise. It becomes begging only if the material definition is used in a disproof of the immaterial view. That's what you did in the first post (#145) to which I responded. Tell me this is not begging:
Immanuel Can wrote:Yes, that's another good problem for Materialism: at what point does the "person," "life" or "soul," whatever we want to call the immaterial quality that distinguishes a mere body from a living being, enter a baby?
If, as you state, evidence and logic are not required in order for a person to hold you view, it doesn't necessarily say the view itself cannot be held rationally, provided a rationale is at least possible. But it does mean that your own belief in it would be irrational -- that is, a potentially rational view held on irrational grounds.
What means the belief is irrational? You didn't supply any violation of rational thinking.
So, for example, you could believe the world was round, which would be correct; but if you believed it without evidence -- that is, not because you'd seen a picture or been given data showing it was so, but rather because you think circles are pretty, or because you just find the idea that the earth is round personally attractive -- then you would be believing something true, but on irrational grounds.
Ah, difference in rational definition. I would say this is a lack of rational grounds. Irrational would be ignoring actual evidence to the contrary. The round Earth is inconsistent. How could it be true? It would fall if nothing held it up. That's rational evidence against it. That rational evidence must then be countered for the argument to hold (It is indeed falling).
If you belief in Materialism were held without evidence or logic, then that belief would be irrational, by your own testimony.
Great. I think your view is irrational then. I hadn't said it before, but incredulity does not seem a rational argument.
Even if it
were right (though I think it's self-evidently wrong), you would only accidentally be believing the truth. In such a case, nothing would warrant calling your view "rational."
This is a perfectly clear case of a faith statement of the least-founded kind... pure, gratuitous faith. For you confess that any physical answer to what consciousness is has "yet to be discovered," which is an acknowledgement it has NOT been discovered yet, and then you imagine us finding it anyway, and put your trust in that prospect-not-yet-realized.
Physics is not searching for consciousness. Not their field. Those guys are looking in the other direction. I don't think there is anything left out by physics on this front. A unified field theory isn't going to make a scratch on mind philosophy. QM on the other hand really blows things out of the water. A dualist must pretty much deny QM, or buy into an interpretation that lets one cause changes to past events. Lots of physics to rewrite to keep your view consistent with empirical evidence.