Tamminen wrote: ↑July 25th, 2018, 8:31 am
Our definitions of 'subject' are indeed very different. In my definition an ant may be a subject but a stone is not. A stone does not see, for instance.
As I said, I understand your definitions. My use of the word 'conscious' is a poor choice given the relationship I define for it, but it seems to be the relationship that gives objects their existence to the subject. I need a better word, and life forms are fundamentally no different than any other arrangement of matter in my book. That is where we differ. I gave what I see as the fundamental distinction, even if 'conscious of' is a poor word to describe the relationship.
I like the fact that you include ants. A lot of people say humans are conscious, rocks are not. No opinion about anything in between, or if they have one, then only humans period. How about a plant? How about a single-cell life form or a robot AI? Just curious. You probably include ET life if you include ants.
If two subjects see an apple in the same way so that they can agree on what it is like, this is not only because those subjects are similar but primarily because the apple appears to them in the same way, and it appears to them in the same way because it is the same apple with certain objective properties.
I pointed out why this isn't a true statement. Yes, they can agree on what the apple is like, but the properties of the apple are still subjective (relative to the subjects), and not necessarily objective.
What those properties are can only be studied with increasing accuracy, by science for instance. But here we come to the question of what is true and what is not. There can also be false appearances.
No, I'm assuming we're not being fed lies. An assumption, sure, but we have to go with what we experience.
So things are what they are, not other things. But the being of things depends on the being of subjects.
Agree there as well, but I don't assume the <objective> being of subjects.
If all subjects were removed from the world, which is impossible, the world would not change much, it would only lose its existence.
You mean it is impossible for all life to end after some time? You seem to consider life to make some ontological difference, and here you say it cannot be 'removed'. Not sure what you mean by that word choice.
Wayne92587 wrote: ↑July 25th, 2018, 11:38 am
Halc;
Your reasoning is a Rationalization, is not Rational.
What claim did I rationalize? I've tried to stay away from just asserting claims as everybody else seems to be doing.