mikkel_the_dane
My own religion
Fair enough about you never saying it, that was how I understood what you meant with:
"Since I am a cognitive relativist I don't believe in proof at the core of what reality really is. I believe and that seems to work."
I understood that to believe, that I or anyone else wouldn't be able to proof anything to you, and therefore your beliefs are equally valid. Can you explain what you meant with that statement then?
But even if you are a Boltzmann brain, would it ultimately matter and how would you even know?
Lets say that you are one or at least think you are, at a bare minimum you exist, just as a thought experiment.
So through this brain you experience reality, but as you already said, you make mistakes in what you believe, which must mean that its the Boltzmann brain that is wrong and give you false beliefs? So if you can't trust that, then you can't trust anything it says, let alone that you are a Boltzmann brain to begin with as that might obviously be wrong as well. It seems to end up in some sort of strange circular argument.
Which makes nothing matter in the end anyway, as again, you wouldn't be able to distinguish what is real and what is not real?
I just don't see how that is suppose to work?
Maybe I just don't really understand what you mean.
Okay, take a very simple example.
Someone: Reality is physical.
Someone else: No, reality is from God.
Me: I wonder how that is possible at all.
Let us keep it simple - one of them have a wrong belief, right!!!
How does that work? Well, reality must include wrong beliefs.
Okay, but where does that take place? We can't see, touch/hold or otherwise use our external senses to experience wrong beliefs. It is going on in the mind. So reality includes at least one mind, yours.
You don't know if you are a Boltzmann Brain or not, but you know that not all your experiences are yours. These ones as this text are now coming to you. You know that because you can test it. You don't what next full sentence will be. My given name is what? You don't know it and can't control what comes next. It is Mikael.
Well, now you have a simple model of reality:
You.
Your experiences as your own, where you can change your mind. (Internal)
Other experiences, which are not yours. (External)
That is the problem with ontological solipsism. You are not the only thing going on. You are not just a mind on its own, There is something else.
So back to:
"Since I am a cognitive relativist I don't believe in proof at the core of what reality really is. I believe and that seems to work."
You have a lot of experience, some internal and some external. Apparent there is a past, present and future and you make a mental abstract map of how to fit your sum of experiences together.
But what is beyond your experiences?
Well, reality, right?
- Reality is the sum or aggregate of all that is real or existent within a system, as opposed to that which is only imaginary. The term is also used to refer to the ontological status of things, indicating their existence. In physical terms, reality is the totality of a system, known and unknown.
- Or the state of things as they actually exist, as opposed to an idealistic or notional idea of them.
- Or objective reality as having reality independent of the mind.
I am an epistemological solipsist. Not that I am the only thing existing. But that I have only external and internal experiences. So I don't know and nor do you. You trust reality to be fair and not "feed" you wrong beliefs, whether you are a Boltzmann Brain or not.
Remember this one:
"The cosmological principle is usually stated formally as 'Viewed on a sufficiently large scale, the properties of the universe are the same for all observers.' This amounts to the strongly philosophical statement that the part of the universe which we can see is a fair sample, and that the same physical laws apply throughout. In essence, this in a sense says that the universe is knowable and is playing fair with scientists." William C. Keel (2007). The Road to Galaxy Formation (2nd ed.). Springer-Praxis.
That is just a different scale of external. The problem is the same. Whether the universe is knowable and is playing fair with scientists?
So to the end: Real or not? And whether objective reality is giving me false beliefs? I don't know and nor do you. Real and unreal are in your mind just as wrong. You can't use your external experiences to decide real, unreal, right and wrong. They are in your mind.
God is not the only word in the mind. Real, unreal, wrong, right and so on. Or indeed fair. I don't know if the universe is fair. I trust it to be fair. That is faith.
That is how I in part became religious. I figure out as non-believer that I did use faith. That I can trust the universe; i.e. objective reality.
Now use the Boltzmann Brain on yourself and notice that you can't know if you are a Boltzmann Brain or not?
What is next? That doesn't makes sense, so you believe that the universe is fair. That is faith.
You can't with reason, logic, evidence, truth or what not decide that. But it doesn't makes sense, if you are not in the actual universe.
Your part:
Which makes nothing matter in the end anyway, as again, you wouldn't be able to distinguish what is real and what is not real?
But it still matters, so I use faith. I trust the universe to be fair.