True. But you seem to anyway. By the way, how do you know other people exist?If one was following the method of doubt, one wouldn't believe in the mind, and therefore could not not believe in the existence of objects outside it.If one is to believe the existence of objects outside the mind (which one shouldn't, if one actually followed this method of doubt),
I was disputing the statment "I think, therefore I am," rather than the argument "'I think, therefore I am' is indisputably correct." I'd have to agree with you concerning the latter.The first argument (that he hadn't found, in "I think therefore I am", something indubitably true) was the only one being disputed. If you've been disputing some other ones, that could explain a lot of your confusion.
I don't believe knowledge is as straightforward as that. It arises from the physical phenomena, it is not the phenomena itself. What proof do I have for this statement? It's quite simple. Knowledge is a holistic phenomenon. Information only appears when separate elements (each of which holds little or no information of its own) combine to form a whole (and in this case, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts). And if existence is always a straightforward either/or, we wouldn't be having this "argument".Utterly wrong; the knowledge in the software exists in variations in voltages, and exists in the brain as electrochemical signals - both physical phenomena which, obviously, exist. This isn't open to philosophical discussion; it's the bare fact of the matter. Existence is always a straightforward either/or.
Same difference.Yes; zero 'exists' as an artificial construct, just like a business does, but that's a different sense of the word 'exist'. That doesn't make existence "a poorly defined concept", it just means it has multiple denotations, like most words.
But how do they realize it? They start off with a clean slate, yet soon affirm their own existence? Why? How?It is irrelevant, because you still don't understand the method of doubt. Newborn babies don't undergo the method of doubt because they immediately start to accumulate dubitable concepts, which someone in the method of doubt would reject. Amongst these would be the realisation of existence.Is it? You're the one who brought up the method of doubt in the first place. Of course, I have already stated in the beginning of the post the relevance of my scenario (of course it is only relevant to this "method of doubt" stuff, and not to the central discussion).
You've only proved it by reducing it to something less than it already was. Your argument seems to be that an experience can exist independently of a mind only if it is no longer experienced (i.e. it is stripped of the only thing that made it an experience in the first place.) And can you think of something that exist but which has not impact on its environment?Now there's a truly daft definition of existence: "Existence, n. The state enjoyed by things which have an impact on their environment." I've explained why an experience need not have an external experiencer so many times now I will vomit if I do it again, and not once have you refuted it.
So it is. But nothing can be proven unless it is observed. You seem to be able to think you can prove things without observing them. Idealism is just a philosophy that dismisses this assumption (because that is all it really is.)This is just an extension of your idealist nonsense.It does not presuppose the existence of anything. The self comes into existence as soon as it is observed. It cements its existence by observing itself.
Anyone can say something of that sort, but is doesn't mean its real; as soon as one tries to verify its existence, one realizes that it is utterly impossible.You know, I didn't say *visualise* it. That would be *silly*. When I say 'imagine', I clearly mean 'conceive of'.
I was wrong in saying that this verified his argument (I typed this last part very quickly, and I meant to use another synonym of presuppose. Perhaps "acknowledges" was the word that I was looking for?").Verifies? He was presupposing it a second ago. Id est, his conclusion is present in his proposition. In other words, it's circular logic. Seems familiar... Oh yes, he's the chappy that said "God is perfect; if God didn't exist he would be less than perfect; therefore God exists." Made a regular habit of it, eh?
But regarding "I think, therefore I am".... I will try to prove it
1. I think, which means I have an experience.
2. All things that have experiences are conscious. Therefore I am conscious.
3. All things that are conscious exist. Therefore I exist.
I think the only problem is with statement #1. We have already agreed that it is circular reasoning; and the only way to get around this is to interpret the first I differently from the second one. If we treat the second I as the ego, self, (soul?), whatever, and we define the first I as the brain, the statement becomes:
"My brain thinks, therefore I exist." Now I believe the argument will hold water; although I can see someone might have an objection with #3.