How there could be more than one Mind?
How there could be more than one Mind?
Lets define Mind and Mental state first. Mind is the essence of every beings with the abilities which allow experiences, decides and acts. Mental state is what Mind can experience and act upon. We know by fact that the experience decision and act are local phenomena. Mind however does not have any location since it is not mental state.
Now lets consider many beings and one Mind. One Mind allows that experiences to happen locally, where we are. The acts also happen locally after decisions are made. Now lets consider two Minds and many beings. Two Minds allows that the experiences as previous case. The decisions and acts are made in two different Minds hence we could have the conflict in decisions. Therefore we could only have one Mind.
Now lets consider many beings and one Mind. One Mind allows that experiences to happen locally, where we are. The acts also happen locally after decisions are made. Now lets consider two Minds and many beings. Two Minds allows that the experiences as previous case. The decisions and acts are made in two different Minds hence we could have the conflict in decisions. Therefore we could only have one Mind.
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Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
Does "a mind" know what it thinks?
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Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
???bahman wrote: Mind however does not have any location since it is not mental state.
"Mind" is a collective term for an individual's various mental states. Minds have locations (as is the case for every other existent, too).
There is no such thing.Now lets consider many beings and one Mind.
As indeed they quite frequently do.The decisions and acts are made in two different Minds hence we could have the conflict in decisions.
Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
We think and Mind allows it.Hobbes' Choice wrote: Does "a mind" know what it thinks?
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Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
Is that a yes or a no?bahman wrote:We think and Mind allows it.Hobbes' Choice wrote: Does "a mind" know what it thinks?
How do we think without a mind?
Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
We already discussed materialism/monism and showed that it is problematic. Here we are discussing dualism, the only alternative option.Terrapin Station wrote:???bahman wrote: Mind however does not have any location since it is not mental state.
"Mind" is a collective term for an individual's various mental states. Minds have locations (as is the case for every other existent, too).
There is under dualism.Terrapin Station wrote:There is no such thing.bahman wrote: Now lets consider many beings and one Mind.
What do you mean?Terrapin Station wrote:As indeed they quite frequently do.bahman wrote: The decisions and acts are made in two different Minds hence we could have the conflict in decisions.
Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
We experience our thoughts using Mind.Hobbes' Choice wrote:Is that a yes or a no?bahman wrote:We think and Mind allows it.Hobbes' Choice wrote: Does "a mind" know what it thinks?
We cannot experience without Mind hence we cannot think without Mind.Hobbes' Choice wrote: How do we think without a mind?
Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
If you actually knew anything about the mind, and not just speak out of your ass as always, then you would know skitzo people indeed can have multiple minds.bahman wrote:Therefore we could only have one Mind.
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Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
Aside from that for a moment, it's a semantic issue. I don't mean that as a (negative) criticism. I'm referring simply to what "mind" conventionally refers to. In conventional usage, "mind" is simply an umbrella term for all variety of mental states.bahman wrote: We already discussed materialism/monism and showed that it is problematic. Here we are discussing dualism, the only alternative option.
Re "We already discussed materialism/monism and showed that it is problematic"--no you didn't, as you're wrong that it's problematic.
Actually, that doesn't follow at all. Dualism in no way implies that there are many beings and one mind. And logically, "many beings and one mind" doesn't at all imply that we're not talking about materialism/physicalism. It's just that contingently, there's no such thing, whatever our ontological stance re materialism/dualism. You keep making very rudimentary logical mistakes, but it's as if you're inable to learn that you're doing so.There is under dualism.
Persons' decisions and acts are often in conflict.What do you mean?
Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
Mind is simply useless under materials then all you have are variety of mental state. The problem which is left is that how a set of mental states could be experienced? What does decide? And what does Act?Terrapin Station wrote:Aside from that for a moment, it's a semantic issue. I don't mean that as a (negative) criticism. I'm referring simply to what "mind" conventionally refers to. In conventional usage, "mind" is simply an umbrella term for all variety of mental states.bahman wrote: We already discussed materialism/monism and showed that it is problematic. Here we are discussing dualism, the only alternative option.
Yes, we discuss the materialism several times. It seems that you don't believe that laws of nature are realistic. Do you believe in laws of nature at all?Terrapin Station wrote: Re "We already discussed materialism/monism and showed that it is problematic"--no you didn't, as you're wrong that it's problematic.
Actually, the scenario where there is one mind and many beings is possible. This doesn't answer that why experience for example is local when Mind has no location, but that is a general problem in dualism.Terrapin Station wrote: Actually, that doesn't follow at all. Dualism in no way implies that there are many beings and one mind. And logically, "many beings and one mind" doesn't at all imply that we're not talking about materialism/physicalism. It's just that contingently, there's no such thing, whatever our ontological stance re materialism/dualism. You keep making very rudimentary logical mistakes, but it's as if you're inable to learn that you're doing so.
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Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
As I noted a couple times, yes, "Mind" is a catch-all term for all the mental states we have. I don't think there's anything useless about that either semantically--it's useful to have a catch-all term like that, or existentially, as those varieties of mental states are allowing me to reason and type this, for example. I find that quite handy.bahman wrote: Mind is simply useless under materials then all you have are variety of mental state.
It's not that "mental states are experienced (by something else)." Rather, they ARE experience. That's what experience IS.The problem which is left is that how a set of mental states could be experienced?
You do. Your brain, which controls many of the functions of the rest of your body (with respect to actions, especially).What does decide? And what does Act?
I do not believe that there are laws as such, no. "Laws of nature" are how we think about/interpret what we observe/experience. That doesn't imply that I believe that nature is "completely random" or anything like that, but there aren't anything like literal laws in my view, either. I believe the truth is in between the two. There are statistical regularities, but that's all they are. In any event, as I keep saying over and over, and as I'm sure I'll have to say over and over in the future, there's no logical connection between stances on the ontological status of physical laws and materialism.Yes, we discuss the materialism several times. It seems that you don't believe that laws of nature are realistic. Do you believe in laws of nature at all?
Yes. My comment in no way implied that it's not possible. It's that there's no logical connection between that idea and dualism versus materialism. In other words, all of the following are logically possible (well, ignoring potential coherency problems with dualism, ignoring that we'd be using "mind" in a novel way, etc., at least):Actually, the scenario where there is one mind and many beings is possible.
* Dualism is true and there are many beings and only one mind.
* Dualism is true and there are many beings and many minds, one for each being.
* Physicalism is true and there are many beings and only one mind.
* Physicalism is true and there are many beings and many minds, one for each being.
Many other variations are possibly, too, by the way. (For example, "there are many beings and exactly five minds.")
At any rate, it's possible, but it in fact, it doesn't obtain that there is only one mind. So it's contingently false.
"Mind has no location" is false, by the way.This doesn't answer that why experience for example is local when Mind has no location,
Again, this is not necessarily the case. One can be a dualist and believe that mind DOES have a location--it's just that mind isn't physical. There's nothing that says that nonphysical things can not logically/possibly have locations. Of course, one can believe that nonphysical things do not have locations, too. There are different options for belief.but that is a general problem in dualism.
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Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
You've not answered my question.bahman wrote:We experience our thoughts using Mind.Hobbes' Choice wrote:Is that a yes or a no?bahman wrote:
We think and Mind allows it.
We cannot experience without Mind hence we cannot think without Mind.Hobbes' Choice wrote: How do we think without a mind?
Does a mind know what it thinks yes or no.
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Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
if there was only one mind, it couldn't be lost and that's just crazy...
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Re: How there could be more than one Mind?
The problem is that you don't believe in laws of nature.Terrapin Station wrote:As I noted a couple times, yes, "Mind" is a catch-all term for all the mental states we have. I don't think there's anything useless about that either semantically--it's useful to have a catch-all term like that, or existentially, as those varieties of mental states are allowing me to reason and type this, for example. I find that quite handy.bahman wrote:
Mind is simply useless under materials then all you have are variety of mental state.
What is the use of experience under materialism?Terrapin Station wrote:It's not that "mental states are experienced (by something else)." Rather, they ARE experience. That's what experience IS.bahman wrote:
The problem which is left is that how a set of mental states could be experienced?
You defined mind as a set mental states. We however have ability to experience, decide and act. Why we should experience mental state at all?bahman wrote:
What does decide? And what does Act?Terrapin Station wrote: You do. Your brain, which controls many of the functions of the rest of your body (with respect to actions, especially).
Do you believe in causality?bahman wrote:
Yes, we discuss the materialism several times. It seems that you don't believe that laws of nature are realistic. Do you believe in laws of nature at all?Terrapin Station wrote: I do not believe that there are laws as such, no. "Laws of nature" are how we think about/interpret what we observe/experience. That doesn't imply that I believe that nature is "completely random" or anything like that, but there aren't anything like literal laws in my view, either. I believe the truth is in between the two. There are statistical regularities, but that's all they are. In any event, as I keep saying over and over, and as I'm sure I'll have to say over and over in the future, there's no logical connection between stances on the ontological status of physical laws and materialism.
Well, we cannot have one mind and different beings under materialism.bahman wrote:
Actually, the scenario where there is one mind and many beings is possible.Terrapin Station wrote: Yes. My comment in no way implied that it's not possible. It's that there's no logical connection between that idea and dualism versus materialism. In other words, all of the following are logically possible (well, ignoring potential coherency problems with dualism, ignoring that we'd be using "mind" in a novel way, etc., at least):
* Dualism is true and there are many beings and only one mind.
* Dualism is true and there are many beings and many minds, one for each being.
* Physicalism is true and there are many beings and only one mind.
* Physicalism is true and there are many beings and many minds, one for each being.
Many other variations are possibly, too, by the way. (For example, "there are many beings and exactly five minds.")
At any rate, it's possible, but it in fact, it doesn't obtain that there is only one mind. So it's contingently false.
If what you say is true then what is the difference between mind and matter? Mind simply a form of matter.bahman wrote:
This doesn't answer that why experience for example is local when Mind has no location,Terrapin Station wrote: "Mind has no location" is false, by the way.That is correct under dualism since mind is not physical.