UndercoverElephant
Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Messages
- 9,058
Nope.
Let's say not.
OK. So we have established that you don't want to label either P1 or P2 physical. Can you tell me why, instead of just refusing to do so?
Of course not, because then we would be confused about which one we were talking about.
Good, let's hold on to that thought, because it is going to be very important later that nobody goes back to mixing them up.
How about "internal experience" and "external stimulus"? That avoid all kinds of ontological baggage.
That will suffice. So we now have "internal experience" and "external stimulus" and these two things are mutually exclusive.
We need two more definitions:
Physicalism: the philosophical theory that matter is the only reality.
Physical: ??????
In order to prove physicalism is false, we first need to agree on a definition of physical. Since we now have two agreed terms (P1 and P2), we therefore have to try to define what we mean by "physical" in terms of P1 and P2.
OBSERVATION: Almost everybody taking part in this debate, on all sides, is likely to agree that P1 and P2 together account for everything which exists. There are internal experiences, there are external stimuli, but it is fairly meaningless to start talking about things which we neither experience nor postulate the existence of as external causes. Why posit anything else?
So we need to map: "internal experience" and "external stimulus" onto "physical". Now, there are various ways we could approach this
A1) "Physical" looks like an awful name for "internal experience". That sounds like a fast-track to idealism. That is how hammegk might well define "physical". Am I correct in thinking you will reject this approach?
A2) "Physical" sounds like a much better name for "external stimulus". It's not a usage I would use, because I'd call it neutral instead. But it is at least one potential approach. Is this what "physical" is?
If neither approach provides a sensible way to define "physical" then we have major problems, because it looks like we can't find a way to coherently define what we mean by "physical", since we have already agreed to rule out defining it to be both P1 and P2, and since you have rejected defining it as either one of them and since we don't want to introduce anything new, either. In other words, if physical doesn't refer to something describable in terms of P1 and P2 then "physical" refers to nothing at all --> physicalism is false.
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