Keith Russell wrote:If reality, external to human consciousness, is not "material", could human consciousness then be the "material"? (Or, do you reject that notion as well?)
What I object to are equivocated, apologetic notions of "materialism" patched together to semantically salvage the idea.
What is the point of insisting on "materialism" when, as an idea, it was juxtaposed against mind-primary idealism, and then when science clearly proves our experience of the physical world to be mind-primary, try to claim the mind as "material"? At what point does one give up the long-dead ghost of materialism, if to salvage it one must coopt the very idea it was diametrically opposed to?
Materialism as a philosophy meant more than "
experience is constructed of something"; it meant that experience is constructed of
material. Not "energy" (which was later coopted into materialistic definition), not "potential", not "information", not "mind". IOW materialism meant that mind was not generating any fundamental aspect of what we experienced as physical reality, and we know precisely the opposite is true; mind generates everything we recognize as physical reality, because without mind not only does physical reality not exist, it never would have existed, and cannot ever have existed unless the observation of a mind collapsed quantum potential into physical experience.