Your Reality begins when you declare your existence by saying that, I am conscious, "I am",
I have presents, I exist.
Your Consciousness is convoluted, as is the Physical existence of you Brain, Your Philosopher's Stone.
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The world it must always have the structure, Therefore a subjectless universe is logically impossible.There are no weak points in your reasoning, however that are realities that are left out of your reasoning.
Remember that there is only one universe, by definition.
If there are weak points in this reasoning, I am always ready to discuss about them.
Tamminen wrote: ↑August 1st, 2018, 4:32 amYou are thinking of panentheism.Greta wrote: ↑July 31st, 2018, 6:01 pmI do not understand. How does that differ from the pantheist notion of the universe being God creating itself?We need no transcendent God. The absolute is in us.
Tamminen wrote:When I spoke about the subject's project, and did not say what that project is, that was deliberate. You are the subject. Ask yourself what you want. Do you want to live for ever? Do you want to die for good? Do you want to understand what existence is, what others are, what the universe is, what is the sense of all this if any?I suggest that what we want doesn't matter in the big picture scenario - we still end up getting what we get.
Tamminen wrote: Perhaps the subject wants to understand its own being through the world and others. And who are the others? But you are the subject. You should know. I do not know. But as the subject, I cannot escape existence, and this original situation is perhaps the origin of this mysterious phenomenon of living in this mysterious universe.This winding approach, trying to weasel into the very hub of existence, reminds me of the German existentialists. It seems to comes down to a focus on subjective being.
Tamminen wrote:Maybe, as long as you treat deep sleep and coma as only relative non existence.Why would there be a necessity to be conscious when virtually all of reality apparently is not conscious?Because the non-conscious universe is a logical impossibility, as I have said. This insight has far-reaching metaphysical and existential consequences, which I have tried to describe in almost all of my posts on this forum.
Tamminen wrote:if there are no conscious beings in the universe seen as a spatiotemporal totality1. If there are no perceivers, then why does this mean there are no objects?
then there is nothing…
Tamminen wrote:Because the non-conscious universe is a logical impossibility, as I have said.
Tamminen wrote:Therefore a subjectless universe is logically impossible.Where is the "logical impossibility"? Saying it, doesn't make it so. You need to show your hand; show your logic! Can you fill in the missing premises that lead to this conclusion?
RJG wrote: ↑August 1st, 2018, 9:55 pmI was thinking along similar lines. Heck, even when we are conscious sometimes we almost disappear.Tamminen wrote:if there are no conscious beings in the universe seen as a spatiotemporal totality1. If there are no perceivers, then why does this mean there are no objects?
then there is nothing…
2. If I close my eyes, does everything disappear (i.e. no longer exist)?
3. If all the conscious beings in the universe went to sleep (unconscious) at the same time, does the universe poof into nothing? ...and when we all wake up (if that were even possible), how does the universe pop back into existence?
Greta wrote: ↑August 1st, 2018, 9:49 pm You are thinking of panentheism.No, more like pantheism, more like Spinoza.
Greta wrote: ↑August 1st, 2018, 9:49 pm I suggest that what we want doesn't matter in the big picture scenario - we still end up getting what we get.I agree, but we also get our desires.
Greta wrote: ↑August 1st, 2018, 9:49 pm In that sense we are all 13.8 billion years old and we have developed from being the mayhem of the early universe, and we have been parts of stars and planets, various floating energies and electron clouds. We were there as the first rock eaters started the process of transforming most of the Earth's surface into biology. We also were the archaea and mitochondria who found themselves in a fateful symbiosis. We were the trilobites, the dinosaurs, the apes, early hominids, parts of violent early civilisations - and now we talk on forums without buildings.I agree. This is our history.
Greta wrote: ↑August 1st, 2018, 9:49 pm Maybe, as long as you treat deep sleep and coma as only relative non existence.Deep sleep and being non-conscious are phenomenologically identical if there is no subjective experiencing during deep sleep.
RJG wrote: ↑August 1st, 2018, 9:55 pm If all the conscious beings in the universe went to sleep (unconscious) at the same time, does the universe poof into nothing? ...and when we all wake up (if that were even possible), how does the universe pop back into existence?I think this is the only valid argument from you. And my answer is: it vanishes in the same way as my world vanishes during sleep, but it does not really vanish because I usually wake up if I am not dead. The vanishing of the universe in this sense cannot be compared to the vanishing of objects.
Greta wrote: ↑August 2nd, 2018, 1:27 am Tam, a question to help clarify: What are your thoughts on the comparison between the sense of being of a person during deep sleep and the sense of being of a rock? Are they:They are both complete blank if there is no subjective experiencing during sleep. I do not think panpsychism is a plausible theory. As to #3, I do not know, maybe we just forget the sense of being during sleep. But we are speaking of the concepts of 'conscious' and 'non-conscious' and the relation of conscious being to being in general, not specifically what is what in nature.
1. both a complete blank (materialism)
2. neither a blank (panpsychism) or
3. does one have a marginal sense of being while the other does not?
I ask out of curiosity; I have absolutely no idea how or if you will answer
5.552 The “experience” which we need to understand logic is not that such and such is the case, but that something is; but that is no experience.In this scenario, which I share, the positing of a possible world without subjects is indeed logically impossible, because the logical space to posit it is always within the subject-world structure.
Logic precedes every experience—that something is so. It is before the How, not before the What.
5.5521 And if this were not the case, how could we apply logic? We could say: if there were a logic, even if there were no world, how then could there be a logic, since there is a world?
RJG wrote: ↑August 1st, 2018, 9:55 pm If there are no perceivers, then why does this mean there are no objects?If by objects you mean the totality of objects, and by perceivers conscious subjects, this is the question I have now answered as well as it is possible for me at the moment. I think I have shown my hand. The ball is yours.
Tamminen wrote:In this scenario, which I share, the positing of a possible world without subjects is indeed logically impossible, because the logical space to posit it is always within the subject-world structure.It is logically impossible for a subject to posit that a subject-less world exists, because the subject must exist in this world to do the positing. Note: it is the "positing" of this that is logically impossible, NOT the "subject-less world". This is similar to the logical impossibility of me denying my own existence, because I must exist to be able to deny my existence.
Tamminen wrote:...this is the question I have now answered as well as it is possible for me at the moment. I think I have shown my hand. The ball is yours.Okay, I still don't see how you get from Premise 1 to your conclusion. We need a premise 2 that logically (mathematically) connects premise 1 to the conclusion.
RJG wrote: ↑August 2nd, 2018, 9:23 pm Premise 1 - A subject cannot logically posit that a world without subjects exists.Not quite. A subject can logically try to posit a possible world of any kind, but because that world must fit into the logical space within the structure of 'subject-world', which is our logical universe, so to speak, the possible world we really posit cannot be without subjects. The weak point which I challenged you to attack on, is the question of where logic itself stands in our reality, and if it stands in our reality at all. So if you look what Wittgenstein says about it, you can oppose him or not. But if you agree with him, as I do, the logcal conclusion should be clear. Or is it?
Premise 2 - (missing premise)
Conclusion - A world (the universe) without subjects is logically impossible
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