Smoke
Done here.
To whom is this question directed?Could someone please offer a sound logical argument that they, or anything for that matter, exists. I'm not looking for philosophy or reason just a well formulated logical argument.
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To whom is this question directed?Could someone please offer a sound logical argument that they, or anything for that matter, exists. I'm not looking for philosophy or reason just a well formulated logical argument.
As I said before show me a way which will work. I studied Hume and Descartes in college and at no point could I arrive at something which would allow for a self to not exist. Hume's work despite being rather difficult to penetrate (his skepticism is incredible) does not actually claim that an essential self does not exist, but rather that we know nothing about it. See here:
Bundle of ideas? And just how do these ideas exist (why are they even able to exist in the first place)? What is their medium of existence? Why are they there (what impetus is there for idea creation)? What is "there" in the previous question? What does "ownership" of an idea mean (how can idea exist without being owned)? What is the mind? How can there be a mind if there is no being/person? What is doing the perceiving (what is receiving this information)? What is able to later reflect upon the impression (his word for sensory perception) and thus create an idea?
The challenge is to think of a way in which it is possible for there to be no "I." Hume did not accomplish that. He showed that we cannot actually know anything about the "self" through rationality or introspection (all we have is a bundle of ideas and impressions to work with, and those are not the self).
MTF
Hume said that when we introspect we are never aware of our self as a substance but merely a collection of perceptions. The ‘we’ here assumes that thought and perceptions depend for their identity upon the selves who are said to posses them. But neither Hume nor Descartes identified any core substance (using the appellation in its philosophical sense). In fact Hume said that when we talk of a self or substance we must know what we mean by those terms otherwise they are unintelligible. And referring to his Origin of Ideas, where every idea is derived from previous impressions, he says we have no impression of self or substance, as ‘something simple and individual’. He wrote in the Enquiries:
‘When we entertain, therefore, any suspicion that a philosophical term is employed without meaning or idea, we need but enquire from what impression is that supposed idea derived? And if it be impossible to assign any, this will confirm our suspicion.’
Hume also likened the view that we have no idea of external substance, distinct from the ideas of particular qualities (Idealism?), to that of the question of mind: ie that we have no notion of it distinct from the particular perceptions. Indeed. A fair point!
Your question ‘How can there be a mind if there is no being/person?’ assumes the existence of the very thing you want to establish, as does the question ‘How can an idea exist without being owned?’
I strongly disagree that the challenge is to think of a way to show there could be no ‘I’. That is similar to the believer asking the unbeliever to show there could be no God. To recap, my argument is that the certainty of Descartes’ first principle, which would allow him to proceed with his epistemological building blocks, was never established. He never proved the existence of Descartes distinct from the thinking. So, instead of presumptively arguing backwards, the challenge for the advocate is to demonstrate the existence of this self, if there is such a thing, by identifying its necessary and independent qualities. I’ll now return the challenge to you: show me the way it will work?
So if a mind (of any kind) cannot come forth from nothing.....
Then the mind of God cannot exist?
If I would not exist, then i would not be able to ponder the question of my existence.Could someone please offer a sound logical argument that they, or anything for that matter, exists. I'm not looking for philosophy or reason just a well formulated logical argument.
Could someone please offer a sound logical argument that they, or anything for that matter, exists. I'm not looking for philosophy or reason just a well formulated logical argument.
Could someone please offer a sound logical argument that they, or anything for that matter, exists. I'm not looking for philosophy or reason just a well formulated logical argument.
Could someone please offer a sound logical argument that they, or anything for that matter, exists. I'm not looking for philosophy or reason just a well formulated logical argument.
Okay...one non-existent participant....
We are almost 300 posts into this.
Everyone still existing...slap your faces!
Cottage:
I don’t know why you say I didn’t read the article (I did, and many of the arguments are familiar to me). Many of the views have a psychological base to them, reasoned arguments from ‘commonsense’, and from what is said to be intuitively known, but not intuitively certain.
However, I was unable to find any argument that shows the impossibility that the self does not exist. (I have to say I find the idea of something being declared ‘impossible not to exist’ to be a rather grand pronouncement and the very antithesis of Western analytical philosophy.)
And may I remind you it is not, and has never been my argument that such a thing does not exist.
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Cottage:
I don’t have to! But once again, you are presupposing the thing you hope to prove exists! The object isn’t to show how a non-existent thing can have thoughts (an example of absurd question begging), but to show how thinking establishes a supposed Self. It happens to be my view is that there is no evidence for the existence of an essential self; I agree with Bertrand Russell who said it doesn’t follow that a simple self doesn’t exist but only that ‘we cannot know whether it exists or not, and the ‘the Self except as a collection of perceptions, cannot enter into any part of our knowledge.’* So I reiterate, it isn’t for me to nonsensically prove the non-existence of the concept; rather it is for you to show that it exists. *History of Western Philosophy
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Cottage:
Not quite sure what it is you are saying here. If you mean that when we speak of existence we must be referring to something other than the fact of existence itself, then yes, of course! And in that case what exists quite simply are the ideas. But if you mean something external to the ‘something’, a causal agent, then I have more to say on that matter shortly.
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Cottage:
Mind isn’t an entity distinct from the ideas; it is simply the collective noun.
Mind is the ideas. No ideas, then no mind! Mind doesn’t do things, but is comprised in the ideas.
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Cottage:
The argument here is contingent upon all things being in want of a cause, and unless we want to argue to an infinite regress we must accept the notion of a first cause. But if mind requires a cause then it is answerable only to this first cause. By what argument is the self, as a metaphysical intermediary lacking any necessity, slotted in between a first cause and the ideas, other than to make it fit with what we want to believe? It is a completely arbitrary notion.
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Cottage:
If mind is caused, as it may be, then by definition it doesn’t exist in isolation. But you are arguing that mind is caused and then stating that a particular metaphysical explanation, the self, must be its cause. On that account any metaphysical concept can also be used as a causal bridge, for example a further collection of ideas and even a yet further collection etc, etc until we arrive at the first cause.
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Cottage:
Premise 5 is not axiomatic, and the conclusion is therefore unsound. There is nothing self-evident or logically certain in the statement: ‘It is not possible for that which contains the mind to be anything other than the self.’ The proposition presumes to inform us that mind is only explicable in terms of a self. This is plainly false. Consider the Cosmological Argument, which says whatever begins to exist is caused to exist. If we mount up from that principle we must accept that whatever exists owes that potential to exist to something that has potential to do but not the potential to be, since its existence is actual and necessary. You can call this what you like: Pure Actuality; a First Cause; Necessary Being; ens realissimum, in Kant’s words - or God if you are so inclined. Everything, ideas and ideas of mind not excepted, necessarily inheres in that cause. Now I’m sure that even the ardent advocate for the self would not claim self-creation; therefore that which contains mind is inherent in the first or uncaused cause. Quite simply, then, the concept of ‘self’ is not self-evident and is shown to have no necessary existence.
You've missed the point.*Smiles sweetly*
Given the fact that I got your attention is indicative that I exist as a separate entity unless, of course, you are prone to talking to yourself. In that I am aware of my own existence and choose to interact with you, but more importantly, receive feedback from you, is evidence that we are, in fact, both self aware entities acting independently of each other, as neither knows precisely how the other is going to react.
To anyone who exists.To whom is this question directed?
Are you always this misinformed?Why, since you're certain not to accept it.