Immanuel would help his case if , instead of arguing about materialism and idealism, he simply explained whether he was talking about subjective phenomena or objective phenomena.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 8:52 amYes you do. You also experience what appear to be physical realities. Ah, the discombobulating amphibolous 'appear'. I'll try again. We have experiences, some of which we generally attribute to objective causes, others which we take to be subjective. Some people, such as yourself, include among the objective, things like morality and justice, together with the less contentious 'physical realities'. Others think that things like morality and justice are subjective. Whichever is true, the experience is exactly the same. The same is true of 'physical realities'; whether they are real or ideal, the experience is exactly the same. You have to understand that or you are philosophically knackered.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 18, 2025 8:28 pm"Phenomenology is the study of structures of consciousness as experienced from the first-person point of view." (Stanford) That's definitional. So what's does that have to do with non-physical realities, since you do experience them?Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Wed Jun 18, 2025 8:02 pm...I'm still just asking whether you understand that if a phenomenon isn't experienced, it isn't a phenomenon.
So, back to:The data we, as humans, have to interpret are our experiences. Nobody denies that we have experiences*; as Descartes pointed out, you can't coherently do so. So no, idealism does not dismiss material data; it simply attributes them to a different source than materialists. As I said, this is philosophy 101, no one can even pretend to be a philosopher until they get their head around the basics.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 16, 2025 1:52 pmIdealism does not explain material data; it dismisses all that by relegating it to the realm of "ideas." In that sense, like all mono-theories, it simply deals with data anomalies by denying they are real.
*With the caveat that, as Cicero put it: "Nothing is so absurd that some philosopher hasn't already said it."
The Democrat Party Hates America
Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
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Will Bouwman
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
Wouldn't make a difference. The thing he can't get his head around is that both objective and subjective causes can, at least in theory, stimulate exactly the same experience.
Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
Is that to say that it is a failing to make allowance for different tastes, backgrounds, and needs?Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 12:42 pmWouldn't make a difference. The thing he can't get his head around is that both objective and subjective causes can, at least in theory, stimulate exactly the same experience.
I think it is a failing to do so. However I feel I ought to draw a line somewhere between moral relativity and authority.
You say "at least in theory". But no scientist has ever managed to absolutely get rid of subjective bias, not so? Without decrying probability, isn't it the case that every theory, even Darwin's natural selection theory ,is a matter of probability ?
The difference between my stance and Immanuel 's is different paradigm.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
Heh.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 8:52 amYes you do. You also experience what appear to be physical realities. Ah, the discombobulating amphibolous 'appear'. I'll try again. We have experiences, some of which we generally attribute to objective causes, others which we take to be subjective. Some people, such as yourself, include among the objective, things like morality and justice, together with the less contentious 'physical realities'. Others think that things like morality and justice are subjective. Whichever is true, the experience is exactly the same. The same is true of 'physical realities'; whether they are real or ideal, the experience is exactly the same. You have to understand that or you are philosophically knackered.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 18, 2025 8:28 pm"Phenomenology is the study of structures of consciousness as experienced from the first-person point of view." (Stanford) That's definitional. So what's does that have to do with non-physical realities, since you do experience them?Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Wed Jun 18, 2025 8:02 pm...I'm still just asking whether you understand that if a phenomenon isn't experienced, it isn't a phenomenon.
But perhaps it's a little impolite to make too much of that rhetorical flourish. We should move on.
"The experience is exactly the same." Well, that phrase has implications: it would imply that, for example, the delusions of the LSD addict, which he "experiences" as real, are "exactly the same" as the situation of the man who has taken no LSD, and is not having delusions. For phenomenologically, we can study the nature of the man's delusions, alright: but, of course, not ontologically. So we find that there is all the difference in the world between the claim "this man is imagining/experiencing X," and "what he is imagining/experiencing is real."
Once again, we find that the Materialist is not explaining cognition, or rationality, or argumentation, or volition, or selfhood, even while he's relying on all of them: he's simply denying their real existence, and calling them "epiphenomena" (to use the current term) -- essentially, delusions. They're phenomena that inexplicably are supposed (by the Materialist, of course) to arise spontaneously when an organism has reached some unspecifiable level of complexity, and turn out, also inexplicably, to be of a completely different order from the complex entity from which they "emerged."
That's polysyllabic, but ultimately empty of content. He's talking about a kind of magic, really. And consequently, he's offering no account, and certainly not any explanation of HOW the physical gives rise to the non-physical: all he's offering is a dismissal. He's denying the reality of the very properties upon which the potential of his own argument absolutely depends. He's again caught in a self-contradiction...all the more inconvenient for him, since he also has to remain convinced there's no "self."
But that's not the issue. The issue is whether or not those "experiences" are indicative of something real, or are merely delusions. So in saying "we have experiences" we've said no more than "we have something that may be real or may not be," since perceptions, subjective experiences, can be generated by something real, or produced without reference to reality.So, back to:The data we, as humans, have to interpret are our experiences. Nobody denies that we have experiences*;Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 16, 2025 1:52 pmIdealism does not explain material data; it dismisses all that by relegating it to the realm of "ideas." In that sense, like all mono-theories, it simply deals with data anomalies by denying they are real.
We don't just perceive; sometimes, we dream. The problem is to account for how this phenomenon fits into reality.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
There used to be a time where I thought IC put in a bit more effort to behave himself when he argued with uwot, sometimes staying close to the topic at hand and the argument raised. But since that name change I think he's stopped bothering even with Willy.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
I think he means something much more literal than that, he tends to point to the whole Descartes thing about not being able to tell by inspection of the experience itself whether the source is a real world, or a dream or a naughty demon. We have no way of knowing we're not living in a simulation, so why not buy a pair of Chinese Ray-Bans? That sort of thing. Not normally controversial or difficult to get.Belinda wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 2:18 pmIs that to say that it is a failing to make allowance for different tastes, backgrounds, and needs?Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 12:42 pmWouldn't make a difference. The thing he can't get his head around is that both objective and subjective causes can, at least in theory, stimulate exactly the same experience.
I think it is a failing to do so. However I feel I ought to draw a line somewhere between moral relativity and authority.
You say "at least in theory". But no scientist has ever managed to absolutely get rid of subjective bias, not so? Without decrying probability, isn't it the case that every theory, even Darwin's natural selection theory ,is a matter of probability ?
The difference between my stance and Immanuel 's is different paradigm.
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Will Bouwman
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
Not directly. It is just a common or garden philosophical fact that the universe might be the processes of an almighty mind, for example. Or it might be a simulation, as Flash points out. It is just a fact that there are many possibilities that could produce the exact same experiences that any one of us encounter. The different tastes, backgrounds and needs make no difference to what is the case, but heavily influence what we choose to believe.Belinda wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 2:18 pmIs that to say that it is a failing to make allowance for different tastes, backgrounds, and needs?Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 12:42 pm...both objective and subjective causes can, at least in theory, stimulate exactly the same experience.
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Will Bouwman
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
Clearly you haven't taken LSD, which incidentally, isn't addictive. Anyway, assuming there were an addictive drug that could induce delusions of mundane events, do you understand that, regardless of the situation, the experience of the event would be exactly the same whether induced by events outside your brain or the drug you ingested?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 2:43 pm"The experience is exactly the same." Well, that phrase has implications: it would imply that, for example, the delusions of the LSD addict, which he "experiences" as real, are "exactly the same" as the situation of the man who has taken no LSD, and is not having delusions.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
This is beside the point. You certainly see what I'm pointing to. I could have said "heroin," or "crack," or "fentanyl." The point is simple, in all cases: the "experience" isn't real. The fact that the "experiencer" can't tell is moot. The difference remains, and is vitally important. This is why somebody high on hallucinogens -- of which, you will know, LSD is one -- might jump off a building, imagining he can fly. Reality will then intervene, and very shortly give him a new experience of his being wrong.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 9:14 pmClearly you haven't taken LSD, which incidentally, isn't addictive.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 2:43 pm"The experience is exactly the same." Well, that phrase has implications: it would imply that, for example, the delusions of the LSD addict, which he "experiences" as real, are "exactly the same" as the situation of the man who has taken no LSD, and is not having delusions.
Here we have the ambiguity problem again....do you understand that, regardless of the situation, the experience of the event would be exactly the same whether induced by events outside your brain or the drug you ingested?
You write "the experience" and "would be exactly the same." But it wouldn't. Not at all, in final consequence.
If the hallucinator only imagines he's jumping off a building, he does not at all get the same "experience" as the one who actually jumps off a building, even if their perceptions of the event, at the precise moment of their leap, were identical.
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Will Bouwman
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
It's very simple: the experience is real. The perception, feeling, sensation, call it what you will, is real. The experiences you are having right now, all the sights, sounds, emotions; the entire contents of your mind, are real. An experience is a fact, an event, a datum, you really experience them. What is less certain is what causes your experiences.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 9:46 pmYou certainly see what I'm pointing to. I could have said "heroin," or "crack," or "fentanyl." The point is simple, in all cases: the "experience" isn't real.
Well, yes, future data might compel us to revise our hypotheses. That is generally true of hypotheses, which is one reason they are nearly all underdetermined.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 9:46 pmYou write "the experience" and "would be exactly the same." But it wouldn't. Not at all, in final consequence.
Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
I am as puzzled as Immanuel. I'd have thought that the same dose of a psychoactive substance would have different experiential effects on different persons at different times, And I'd have thought that mood and other psychophysical states have different experiential effects on different persons at different times.
For instance teachers of young children say they can't learn when they are hungry.
I do of course recognise that experiences are real. I claim that experiences are the only reality .Whether experiences are caused by a naughty demon, by God, by psychoactive substance, or by hunger it's experiences that are real.
For instance teachers of young children say they can't learn when they are hungry.
I do of course recognise that experiences are real. I claim that experiences are the only reality .Whether experiences are caused by a naughty demon, by God, by psychoactive substance, or by hunger it's experiences that are real.
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Will Bouwman
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
It does. I don't think Mr Can is confused by that, after all, he postulates two hallucinators, one whose experience of jumping off a building is induced by drugs, the other whose experience is induced by jumping off a building. What have I said that makes you believe I think otherwise?
Incidentally, this idea that LSD can make you believe you can fly is almost certainly a myth. It really came to prominence when pushed by President Nixon's drug policy advisor, whose daughter fell to her death. Her autopsy found no trace of LSD. She was bipolar and probably took her own life in a fit of despair. I can only imagine her father's grief and it is possible he had to blame something other than his daughter's tragic affliction. LSD makes see things spectacularly differently, it doesn't make you stupid.
You might be right, so good for you.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
No, the experience is a perception of what may be real or what may be unreal. Delusions, confusions and dreams are phenomena: people have them. Anybody who doesn't know that, is one of them, obviously.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 8:07 amIt's very simple: the experience is real.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 9:46 pmYou certainly see what I'm pointing to. I could have said "heroin," or "crack," or "fentanyl." The point is simple, in all cases: the "experience" isn't real.
Amphiboly, again.The perception, feeling, sensation, call it what you will, is real. The experiences you are having right now, all the sights, sounds, emotions; the entire contents of your mind, are real.
You're confusing two claims: "I really have a perception that..." and "The thing I'm perceiving is real." THAT one has perceptions is a fact; that these perceptions are all necessarily of what is REAL is false.
If you jump off a building, you're not "revising." You're corrected in the most absolute way. And the result is no longer a "hypothesis." It's a reality.Well, yes, future data might compel us to revise our hypotheses.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 9:46 pmYou write "the experience" and "would be exactly the same." But it wouldn't. Not at all, in final consequence.
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
Of course they do. And this is further evidence that what is being perceived, in both cases, is not real. They're delusions.Belinda wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 8:25 am I am as puzzled as Immanuel. I'd have thought that the same dose of a psychoactive substance would have different experiential effects on different persons at different times, And I'd have thought that mood and other psychophysical states have different experiential effects on different persons at different times.
One of the features of reality is that, whatever it is, it imposes itself on us, and all of us in the same sort of way. I perceive there to be a chair; you perceive the chair from a different side, or with a slightly different colour or shade -- but you don't perceive a goat, an aqualung or a pear tree. We are forced to perceive something in common.
That's how reality works. It's not how delusions work.
They can. They just don't learn as well or as quickly.For instance teachers of young children say they can't learn when they are hungry.
We have to nuance that claim carefully, B. Yes, we are always perceiving, not in touch with the thing-in-itself. But if we are in touch with reality, what we are perceiving will be, so to speak, forced upon us, regardless of our preferences. Reality will compel us to see, essentially, the same object.I claim that experiences are the only reality .
So experiences are not themselves reality. Reality, by contrast, is what constrains the sorts of experiences a normal mind has, in the presence of the similar conditions to other minds.
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Will Bouwman
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Re: The Democrat Party Hates America
What sort of unreal thing can stimulate a perception?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 2:09 pmNo, the experience is a perception of what may be real or what may be unreal.