psyreporter wrote: ↑November 28th, 2021, 2:18 am Is your argument intended to denote that meaning is necessarily applicable to subjective experience on the basis of which the concept consciousness is identified?I'm not saying anything about meaning.
If there's an illusion that there's water in the road ahead, what does that amount to?
It amounts to:
(1) the fact that the road is actually dry ahead, but
(2) It mistakenly appears to something that the road is not dry ahead.
The "something" that the appearance is to in (2) above is consciousness.
Well, if we're saying that there's no consciousness, then how do we make sense of the something that receives the appearance of water in the road ahead where it's the case that there actually is NO water in the road (which is required for it to be an illusion)?
The answer to what "has the illusion" can't be consciousness in that case, because we'd be positing that there is no consciousness. So what would have the illusion? How would we make sense of that idea?
I'm arguing that the idea of an illusion is incoherent when there is no consciousness. If there is no consciousness, there's nothing to have or receive illusions.