T
tonyrey
Guest
I am not denying that physical reality exists. I am simply pointing out that **our starting point **is our stream of consciousness. So the onus is on the physicalist to explain why physical reality is the fundamental reality. It is certainly not the only testable, verifiable model of reality we have available. We have our own direct experience and that of other people which we can compare, test and verify at first hand. If you deny we have any rational basis for investing any meaning in the existence of our minds you are in effect denying the existence of rationality and its source. You are equating consciousness, reasoning and free will with physical processes without providing any evidence that they can be reduced to physical processes. In other words you are putting the cart before the horse. In the order of knowledge the mind undoubtedly comes first. It does not follow, of course, that the mind is the fundamental reality but there are very good reasons to believe the mind is more powerful than the body, that it transcends the body and cannot be explained in terms of the body.*The starting point is simple: we begin with nothing but our thoughts, feelings and sensations! We infer the existence of physical reality from our perceptions. *
Yes, but this is a very casual use of the word ‘infer’. We are physical wired to process the (name removed by moderator)ut of the senses as reflective of an external reality.
We do not need a physical context in order to be aware of ourselves. Our stream of consciousness is the primary object of which we are aware and it is against that background we are aware of the physical world. It is false to assert that our only known source of knowledge is the physical world around us. You seem to be implying that our interior source for knowledge is less real than the exterior world even though it is far more important than what happens in the exterior world. Even though we agree on its main features we all differ in our interpretations of the exterior world and its significance. In other words the world is what we make it! And that is precisely why we exist…It is simpler and more adequate to explain the origin of our existence in terms of what we know directly rather than indirectly - and we have direct experience of personality, rationality, autonomy and consciousness…
None of these obtain without a physical context.
There is very well documented evidence for non-physical sources of knowledge - philosophical, intuitive, spiritual, aesthetic, mathematical and personal - which far exceed the value of science and technology.There may be other sources of knowledge, but there are none known, none that do not fail to match “imaginary” in every detail. Again, that’s not proof that there isn’t or can’t be something more. But as it stands we have nothing more in view, nor any reasonable warrant for believing there is.There may be other sources of knowledge, but there are none known, none that do not fail to match “imaginary” in every detail. Again, that’s not proof that there isn’t or can’t be something more. But as it stands we have nothing more in view, nor any reasonable warrant for believing there is
Is the power of imagination imaginary?! “imaginary” implies the existence of the imagination. Significantly it exists in the mind and not the body…
It is an argumentum ad hominem to reject the supernatural on the grounds of psychological and political reasons. I could equally well say there are powerful psychological and political reasons why atheism is an appealing alternative to belief in the supernatural. In fact, belief in the supernatural is based on the fact that we transcend nature with our power of reason, free will and ability to control our body and our environment as well as on evidence that naturalism (physicalism) is an inadequate explanation of the richness, value and purpose of existence. Naturalism implies that we are natural objects controlled by our environment which happen to exist in an irrational and pointless universe.Of course there’s powerful psychological and political reasons why the supernatural and God and gods are appealing illusions, so there’s a practical warrant for many personally and culturally, but I’m speaking here in terms of objective existentials, of reasoned analysis as to whether belief in the exist of this or that can be justified as a matter of knowledge, rather than emotional preferences or politics.