Belinda wrote: ↑Wed Nov 05, 2025 4:09 pm
seeds wrote: ↑Tue Nov 04, 2025 7:32 pm
Belinda wrote: ↑Tue Nov 04, 2025 10:23 am
Concerning Seeds's request for a scenario of thought without a thinker please see David Hume:-
The mind is a bundle of perceptions.
Come on now, Belinda, you know better than to offer up the old
"appeal to authority" fallacy...
AI Overview wrote:
The appeal to authority fallacy is an informal logical fallacy that occurs when a claim is accepted as true simply because an authority figure believes it, rather than based on actual evidence or the strength of the argument.
How about rather than appealing to the musings of some fallible authority, you instead use your own sense of logic and reasoning to address the challenge I gave to Will...
"...please present to me a situation or scenario where there can be the existence of a thought minus the existence of the thinker (and owner) of the thought..."
Do you really need the dubious assumptions made by some dusty old coot from the 18th century to sort that out for you?
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I am not appealing to the authority of David Hume but to Hume's power of reason. Don't you know there is in Edinburgh a statue of David Hume that is located where Hume calmly outfaces a similarly -sized statue of John Knox.
Philosophers today regard Hume as a giant of philosophy.
Seeds, I had not placed you as an anti-intellectual.
I am not an "anti-intellectual."
No, I am an
"anti-buying into false conclusions" type of person who, based on my own explorations and studies, can see when someone (such as Hume) doesn't know what they're talking about.
Hume may have been an eloquent and highly respected philosopher who put forth many good ideas,...
...however, if from the depths of his reasoning he came to the conclusion summarized in the following quote from Wikipedia (emphasis mine),...
Wiki wrote:
Hume denied that people have an actual conception of the self, positing that they experience only a bundle of sensations and that the self is nothing more than this bundle of perceptions connected by an association of ideas.
...then he simply wasn't awake enough to see (or visualize) the "self" (the "I Am-ness") for what it really is.
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