Terrapin Station wrote:So in your view, "straw man" doesn't refer to misrepresenting someone's statement or argument, but (misrepresenting) what, in your opinion, their statement or argument should have been, had they your perfect grasp of logic, rationality, etc.?
In my view (and yours too, I assume, if you're behaving rationally) a belief system should be addressed in its most solid, rational and consistent form. That's the Principle of Charity -- take on the purest "best" form of what your opponents believe.
And I welcome that. If Materialism can be rendered rationally, let's hear it. However, someone who
says he or she believes something but
does not understand what it is really doesn't believe it at all. Rather, he or she believes some half-backed notion the or she
mistakes for the ideology in question. They're just confused...not good representatives of their "faith." In fact, it would probably be "straw manning" to hold any such person up as a
real Materialist. After all, what they really believe
isn't Materialism, is it?
And I've no doubt that describes many people who call themselves "Materialists." I've met quite a few such. So they say "I'm a Materialist," but don't notice that materials are not an "I," a unique consciousness: so who is left to do the believing? Or they persist in behaving as moral people, all the while professing that morality is just a contingent confluence of materials, and thus totally optional, and not "moral" at all. Or they face some profound life experience like the birth of a child or a death, and they dissolve into sentiment, talking about "the miracle of a new life" or their lost loved ones having "reached a better place, and now looking down on us,"-- forgetting that they have loudly professed that they don't believe in such things. That's ordinary human inconsistency: but we can't take it for logic.
Honestly, I find that Materialism is so utterly shallow and reductional that the only way somebody could maintain belief in it is by not thinking through its implications. Make them think, and their alleged Materialism dissolves. It's just implausible, inconsistent with the existential experiences of human beings, clueless about existential matters, and ultimately unlivable.
But the larger point for you and me is this:
what particular confused people do or do not think they believe doesn't matter one jot -- because the topic here is not "Material
ists," but "Material
ism." Look at the OP.

So what we are discussing here is not what any particular person believes he believes, but what the ideology he espouses ACTUALLY entails.
No criticism, then, of any
person needs to be implied or inferred. But an indictment of the folly and illogic of actually professing or trying to believe Materialism, yes, I'll go with that.