I
itinerant1
Guest
Okay then. I need no warnings from you about your views. I’ve been around the block. And Plantinga does not represent the last word on the subject.As you say, this is not the place for this and we’ll have to pick this up elsewhere, but you will have to lay out in detail what you claim to be Descartes’ error, and how Enlightenment and modern philosophers attempted (and failed) to escape it, because so far you have merely opined that these errors exist without demonstrating what they are or why you believe them to be errors. I give you fair warning that I am a philosophical naturalist who holds with what I believe to be good reason the idea that the brain/mind can attain a reasonably accurate knowledge of some aspects of physical reality and I do not think that it is difficult to show that, for example, Plantinga’s EAAN fails.
Alec
evolutionpages.com
We can agree, it seems, that the mind can attain truth about the external world. It is foolish to deny that the human mind can know external reality existing independently of the mind. The crux of the matter is whether your explanation of the fact the mind attains truth has any real merit. Descartes, and most modern philosophers utterly failed. It would have been much easier for subsequent philosophers to have corrected the Cartesian error than to spin off a multitude of elaborate responses one way or another.
Historically, it is just a textbook example of Aristotle’s dictum that a little error in the beginning amounts to a colossal one in the end. As important as they are, adding brain studies to the mix does not alter the fundamental philosophical problems, nor does it resolve them in the least.
I am just putting your view in its proper historical context. But then again, I look greatly look forward to arguing my seemingly arrogant position in another thread.