B
Ben_Sinner
Guest
Hi everyone,
I saw a message board from avemariaradio.net’s messase board.
forums.avemariaradio.net/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=155795
One of the posters was asking for good rebuttals for some questions he/she had regarding solipsism:
The poster defines solipsism in this context though:
"Solipsism means that my immediate conscious experience is all that exists. Note that my definition of Solipsism specifically excludes the idea that "only the self exists."
I was wondering, as well, what would be some good rebuttals against "my immediate conscious experience is all that exists." ?
Here is his/her rebuttals in advance to some of the arguments that may come up:
***A) If Solipsism is true, then everything will happen as I want it - this is a bad argument. Even if immediate experience is the only reality, it does not follow all immediate experience is freely chosen. This is why I carefully defined Solipsism above: I don’t mean that only the self or its freedom is real because the self is never immediately experienced, so it is actually beyond immediate experience.
B) If Solipsism is true, then I have written Shakespeare’s works and came up with Quantum Mechanics - bad argument for the same reason. Even if immediate experience is the only reality, it does not follow that I created my immediate experience.
C) Solipsism cannot be true because you can’t convince someone Solipsism is true: as soon as you say only your immediate experience is true, your audience will be reflecting on his experience and realize your experience can’t be all that exists. This argument is good, but does not preclude the problem noted above: Solipsism is possible as an entirely private opinion.
D) Solipsism precludes all meanings and therefore precludes morality: quite so. But a Solipsist won’t care about that.
E) Solipsism does not explain causes of my experience - it notes that all my experience is simply as such. This is also a bad argument. Solipsism only acknowledges what is immediately experienced, which precludes causality (which is not immediately experienced.) Hence, Solipsism would not even presume there is a need to explain where one’s experience originates from, as it does not presume there is a cause to experience.***
I figured I could get some good answers on this board about this.
I saw a message board from avemariaradio.net’s messase board.
forums.avemariaradio.net/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=155795
One of the posters was asking for good rebuttals for some questions he/she had regarding solipsism:
The poster defines solipsism in this context though:
"Solipsism means that my immediate conscious experience is all that exists. Note that my definition of Solipsism specifically excludes the idea that "only the self exists."
I was wondering, as well, what would be some good rebuttals against "my immediate conscious experience is all that exists." ?
Here is his/her rebuttals in advance to some of the arguments that may come up:
***A) If Solipsism is true, then everything will happen as I want it - this is a bad argument. Even if immediate experience is the only reality, it does not follow all immediate experience is freely chosen. This is why I carefully defined Solipsism above: I don’t mean that only the self or its freedom is real because the self is never immediately experienced, so it is actually beyond immediate experience.
B) If Solipsism is true, then I have written Shakespeare’s works and came up with Quantum Mechanics - bad argument for the same reason. Even if immediate experience is the only reality, it does not follow that I created my immediate experience.
C) Solipsism cannot be true because you can’t convince someone Solipsism is true: as soon as you say only your immediate experience is true, your audience will be reflecting on his experience and realize your experience can’t be all that exists. This argument is good, but does not preclude the problem noted above: Solipsism is possible as an entirely private opinion.
D) Solipsism precludes all meanings and therefore precludes morality: quite so. But a Solipsist won’t care about that.
E) Solipsism does not explain causes of my experience - it notes that all my experience is simply as such. This is also a bad argument. Solipsism only acknowledges what is immediately experienced, which precludes causality (which is not immediately experienced.) Hence, Solipsism would not even presume there is a need to explain where one’s experience originates from, as it does not presume there is a cause to experience.***
I figured I could get some good answers on this board about this.