Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑July 19th, 2023, 11:28 am OK, I'm not convinced, but let's leave that aside, just for now. Perhaps we'll return to it later. At the moment, I'd like to ask you for clarification:
Do you have links that might support the highlighted statements? I'd like very much to examine them myself...?
Mlw wrote: ↑July 20th, 2023, 12:48 am I can't post links! I refer you to books about the subject matter, such as the books I mentioned. Another book which goes into these questions is Talvitie, et al.: Psychoanalysis and Philosophy of Mind - Unconscious Mentality in the Twenty-first Century (2015). Talvitie has a downloadable article on academia..edu: 'Biting the Bullet: The Nature of Unconscious Fantasy'. Nick Chater appears in several videos on YouTube.OK, you have read some stuff, and found it convincing. But there is other stuff too, perhaps equally convincing?
This idea about the "mental unconscious" has given rise to a Gnostic cult that leads people astray. That's why we need to get back to the concept of transcendence, Plato's hyperuranion. The Forms aren't immanent; they are transcendent.
The problem with 'mind' is that it does not exist, scientifically-speaking. I.e. it cannot be measured, or even detected, by any scientific means. This leaves the field open for any and all theories as to whether we have minds, and if we do, what a detailed understanding of our minds might look like.
The idea of non-conscious parts of the human mind has been with us for some time. Of course, that doesn't mean the idea has merit. But the notion of an 'unconscious' mind has useful explanatory power, and perhaps that confers upon it some degree of merit?
If we assume and accept our general, everyday, notion of 'mind', we are aware that there are many aspects of our minds that are not open to conscious introspection or inspection. There are 'autonomic' functions, like breathing, and our hearts beating. There is pre-conscious perceptual 'processing', that necessarily takes place before sensory input reaches the conscious mind. There are other examples too, but these seem sufficient to suggest that the idea of an 'unconscious' mind has some merit, and could even be an accurate model of how some parts of our minds function.
And, having said all that, it is also quite possible that alternate explanations might prove more useful than our historic ideas about the 'unconscious' mind... Is there anything about Chater's theories that offers useful understanding that older theories do not?
"Who cares, wins"