Terrapin Station wrote: ↑May 23rd, 2020, 8:51 amIf we read that as "The subject having experiences is not an experience," then you're simply restating the claim that I'm saying is mistaken. You, as the subject, are not something different than your experiences.
If we read that as "What experiences are about , or the contents of an experience, are not experiences," that's fine, but it has nothing to do with the fact that you are not different than your experiences.
By "content of consciousness/experience" I mean its immanent subjective mental (experiential/phenomenal) content, and not what a perceptual experience is about, i.e. the experience-transcendent perceptual object. I know that in the philosophy of mind "content" is often used to refer to what I call perceptual, intentional, or representational objects. The object of a perceptual experience or perception is not part of it, but the content is.
Your assertion that I am not different from my experiences is not a fact, but a nonfact, because it's false. It's nonsensical to say that the subject of experience is itself an experience or a "bundle" of experiences. No experience or bundle of experiences can possibly experience something, have or undergo experiences. No item of mentality/experientiality can possibly be a subject of mentality/experientiality, and vice versa.
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"Hume's bundle theory of ourselves may be seen, I think, to be perfectly absurd. Indeed, to my mind, the simplest consideration against the view is perfectly decisive: We must acknowledge the possibility of just a single thinking, or a solitary perceiving, or a lonely experiencing. As such a lonely experience is so perfectly solitary, it can't be part of any bundle or collection of perceptions. On a bundle theory, then, it must be an experiencing of no experiencer at all, which is obviously absurd. Nor will we be helped in avoiding absurdity, it's evident, by a clever logical dodge, as with defining 'minimal bundle' comprising just one single experiencing, which may somehow serve to comprise, or to compose, a being whose experiencing it is. For, it's also obviously absurd to think that an experiencing may be its own subject, or to think that there may be no difference at all between an experiencer, however small and impoverished, and, on the other side, the experiencing that this subject enjoys.
Please don't misunderstand me here. I'll allow that it's perfectly possible for there to be a person who only ever engages in extremely little experiencing. Just so, it's perfectly possible, I'll at least allow, for there to be someone who exists for only a tiny fraction of a single second, experiencing only just then, and then only in just a certain absolutely specific way, perhaps as simple as just experiencing bell-tonely, for instance. As I'll happily allow, this 'terribly fleeting' being won't ever enjoy, or he won't ever suffer, any more experiencing than just that, during his single existential moment. What I'm
not prepared to allow, by contrast, is that there's ever any experiencing, or any (so-called) experience, that somehow
constitutes an experiencer; no more than there's any experience, or any experiencing, really, that's
not the experience of an experiencer. Rather, in every possible case, it's the
experiencer that's quite basic, with the experiencing, or the (so-called) experience, only ontologically parasitical (on the sentient being). It may be helpful, I think, to put the point this graphically: An Almighty God, if Such there be, could make an experiencer who never enjoys any experience; maybe, during his very brief existence, he's always in absolutely deep sleep, say, and, for that reason, he's never experiencing. But, not even an Almighty God could make there be some experiencing (or, what's colloquially called some experience) that wasn't the experiencing (or the so-called experience) of an experiencer, who's ontologically more basic than the experiencing.
On views very different from bundle theories, as with Descartes's idea of substantial individual souls, there's no place for such absurd thoughts as that of an experiencing, or an experience, without any experiencer. (Nor is there any place for such an absurd idea as that of an experiencer who's identical with his experiencing.) Rather than an experience that's floating free of all souls, we should have each experience be an experience of a properly powerful individual, maybe a
manifestation of the individual's
power to experience. Though we may disagree with Descartes on many other matters, on this critical point, he is, apparently, right on the money. By contrast, Hume's bundle theory is wrong."
(Unger, Peter.
All the Power in the World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. pp. 57-8)
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