The Case for Dualism (The nature of a \'Creator\')

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Saturday, October 23, 2010, 14:51 (5144 days ago)

As I continue to read Martin, I am sometimes astounded by his points, and sometimes am driven to think him farcical. However, as I am one who remembers well that many truths are before their time I'm going to reprint Martin's main case for dualism here for the forum to view/critique. I will offer my own after you have offered yours; I do not wish to shape the debate too early. -(1) For let us consider. It is true that there cannot be a notion of 'two' if there is not a notion of 'one.' But how can there be an idea of 'one,' if there is not an idea of 'two'? Surely 'one' as a notion exists only in opposition to 'two.'-(2) If unity is a simple and all-embracing 'pure unity,' then even an idea of such a unity is impossible, for the idea itself of the unity is separate from the unity. 'Two' has to be thinkable before you can think 'One.' -(3) It might be argued that the basic distinction is between 'non' and 'one'--or between 'nothing' and 'something,' as if between 'Yes' and 'No.' But any distinction implies twoness. And the distinction between what is and what is not is a distinction between two. Thus the moment that initial moment of realization arises: 'I am,' it follows that there are two: what is, and what is not. The very notion of existence entails the notion of twoness.-(4) Besides, existence is always in relation; there is no such thing as singular existence. 'It is,' we say. But 'It is' indicates two things, namely namely the 'something' that exists, and that something's 'existing.' Moreover, without one's being oneself 'two,' one cannot even have relation / communication with oneself. To know your own existence, you need an immediate duality: yourself and seeing yourself. 'Zen says,' according to Wilber, 'that spirit is "not-two, not one."' He means by this that spirit is not a unity, but rather a non-duality. Without knowing your own existence, you are not conscious of it, consequently the initial step is not a oneness, but a duality appearing out of nothing, that is a consciousness of existence appearing out of unconsciousness, a light appearing out of darkness.

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

The Case for Dualism

by dhw, Saturday, October 23, 2010, 21:23 (5144 days ago) @ xeno6696

Matt continues to read Martin, and not for the first time I marvel at his endurance. This time the subject is dualism, which as I understand it means that mind and matter are two distinct things, i.e. the mind is not the brain.-(1)	For let us consider. It is true that there cannot be a notion of 'two' if there is not a notion of 'one.' But how can there be an idea of 'one,' if there is not an idea of 'two'? Surely 'one' as a notion exists only in opposition to 'two.'-We have to be very careful about criticizing ideas that have come to us second-hand, as it were, so I can only comment on what Matt has presented us with. The first three items are in this same vein ... an attempt to prove dualism mathematically, because as we all know, an idea of something is not the thing itself. The fourth item is at least a bit more to the point: "to know your own existence, you need an immediate duality: yourself and seeing yourself." This repeats as pseudo-philosophically-scientifically as it can something which again we all know ... namely, that we are conscious of ourselves. What it doesn't tell us is whether material produces consciousness or is used by consciousness, and that is what the whole question of dualism is about. We don't know, and playing games with one and two gets us precisely nowhere.

The Case for Dualism

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Saturday, October 23, 2010, 21:54 (5144 days ago) @ dhw

dhw,-Though what I reprinted directly is his foundational case, he goes on to state in the chapter that because consciousness implies an inverse--unconscious; the fundamental state of components is therefore dual in nature. There is mind, and there is matter. -I can already tell you that he hasn't read any Russel & Whitehead. Their Principia Mathematica ultimately solves this "mathematical" dilemma simply via their general proof that 1 + 1 really does equal 2. (I know, the mathematically minded must seem downright silly in seeking such a proof...)-But I will continue to wait a couple days. I certainly hope you aren't the only one willing to give this a go.

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

The Case for Dualism

by dhw, Saturday, October 23, 2010, 23:50 (5143 days ago) @ xeno6696

MATT: Though what I reprinted directly is his foundational case, he goes on to state in the chapter that because consciousness implies an inverse--unconscious; the fundamental state of components is therefore dual in nature. There is mind, and there is matter. 
I can already tell you that he hasn't read any Russel & Whitehead. Their Principia Mathematica ultimately solves this "mathematical" dilemma simply via their general proof that 1 + 1 really does equal 2. (I know, the mathematically minded must seem downright silly in seeking such a proof...)-Maybe the nature of my objection wasn't clear. There is no mathematical dilemma here. You can have as many ones and twos as you like, the ONLY question is whether the mind is the product of materials or not. Conscious and unconscious may = a duality, but if the mind is not the product of materials, then BOTH are non-physical. If he does want to call them a duality, he'll have to argue for "triplism": body, conscious, unconscious. But the fact that we have two or even three of something does not prove that one of them is non-physical ("there is mind and there is matter"). It's a complete non sequitur. A materialist will accept the distinction between mind and body, just as he'll accept the distinction between heart and lung, and he'll tell you that they are simply different combinations of matter.-However, I'm not arguing against dualism. That is part of my own problem as an agnostic ... I don't understand the nature of consciousness (and nor does anyone else). If there is a dimension beyond the material, then it opens up the whole question of whether there is a form of life beyond that which we know ... and of course a UI comes into the equation. But merely repeating that we have a body and a conscious mind (and an unconscious mind for good measure), and 1 + 1 = 2 is simply playing games with the word "dualism".

The Case for Dualism

by David Turell @, Sunday, October 24, 2010, 02:17 (5143 days ago) @ dhw


> However, I'm not arguing against dualism. That is part of my own problem as an agnostic ... I don't understand the nature of consciousness (and nor does anyone else). If there is a dimension beyond the material, then it opens up the whole question of whether there is a form of life beyond that which we know ... and of course a UI comes into the equation. But merely repeating that we have a body and a conscious mind (and an unconscious mind for good measure), and 1 + 1 = 2 is simply playing games with the word "dualism".-I've followed this discussion and I agree with dhw. There is one and then there is everything else. Not just two. It is all a play with words, mental masterbation. The concedpt of numbering is ancient, altho it took awhile to figure out the need for zero, Perhaps unconscious equals zero, not part of a duality. :-)) We are no further ahead with the approach presented.

The Case for Dualism

by Balance_Maintained @, U.S.A., Wednesday, October 27, 2010, 19:49 (5140 days ago) @ David Turell

I kind of found the whole argument a little silly because he is playing with a false assumption from word go by assuming that nothing is something. Nothing is a tricky enough thing to wrap the mind around because we exist in a universe full of other things that exist and when we try to imagine 'nothing' we always end up imagining 'something' instead. That 'something' in the midst of 'nothing' is representative of duality is non-sense because it is assigning the same value to nothing as it does to 'something'.

The Case for Dualism

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Saturday, October 30, 2010, 02:05 (5137 days ago) @ xeno6696

Most of the players here have had their say. I'll jump in here. 
> (1) For let us consider. It is true that there cannot be a notion of 'two' if there is not a notion of 'one.' But how can there be an idea of 'one,' if there is not an idea of 'two'? Surely 'one' as a notion exists only in opposition to 'two.'
> -His argument here isn't simple mathematics (such as 1 + 1 = 2), it's an argument that we can only distinguish between numbers of things by relation of one set of things, to another set of things. Though his absurdity is in stating that 'one' is only knowable in relation to 'two.' I agree with the rest of us, that 'one' is clearly more fundamental; Russell and Whitehead's proof was such that 'twoness' was derived by looking at objects that had a disparate and abstract commonality; 'twoness.' The only part where his argument has any traction is that it is difficult to determine the exact progression of how we humans think of numbers; do we really only understand 'one' first, and then 'two' by looking at two 'ones' in close proximity? -It is weak traction however; the nature of how we reason with numbers makes up for this deficiency. -> (2) If unity is a simple and all-embracing 'pure unity,' then even an idea of such a unity is impossible, for the idea itself of the unity is separate from the unity. 'Two' has to be thinkable before you can think 'One.' 
> 
> (3) It might be argued that the basic distinction is between 'non' and 'one'--or between 'nothing' and 'something,' as if between 'Yes' and 'No.' But any distinction implies twoness. And the distinction between what is and what is not is a distinction between two. Thus the moment that initial moment of realization arises: 'I am,' it follows that there are two: what is, and what is not. The very notion of existence entails the notion of twoness.
> -I have a little bit of problem with Balance's point here; nothing is literally nothing. In this there is a binary distinction of existence and nonexistence. "Zero is a placeholder." In some twist, balance has hit upon one argument that defeats Leibniz's question of "Why is there something rather than nothing?" It beats my 'non-question' argument by simply pointing out that 'nothing' in itself means exactly that. Nothing. -> (4) Besides, existence is always in relation; there is no such thing as singular existence. 'It is,' we say. But 'It is' indicates two things, namely namely the 'something' that exists, and that something's 'existing.' Moreover, without one's being oneself 'two,' one cannot even have relation / communication with oneself. To know your own existence, you need an immediate duality: yourself and seeing yourself. 'Zen says,' according to Wilber, 'that spirit is "not-two, not one."' He means by this that spirit is not a unity, but rather a non-duality. Without knowing your own existence, you are not conscious of it, consequently the initial step is not a oneness, but a duality appearing out of nothing, that is a consciousness of existence appearing out of unconsciousness, a light appearing out of darkness.-Here, he would simply do better by talking to an actual Zen Buddhist. They do have a denial of duality, but the denial of 'oneness' is such that 'oneness' itself is a mental construct; a delusion. It seems paradoxical, but there is only one existence, one universe, one consciousness in Buddhism, but this oneness is only approachable through experience--not by deductive reasoning or language. To Quote Nietzsche "You can't think--a God." Neither can you think yourself to Nibbana.

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

The Case for Dualism

by dhw, Monday, November 01, 2010, 12:46 (5135 days ago) @ xeno6696

Matt continues to wrestle with Martin's case for dualism:
"His argument here isn't simple mathematics (such as 1 + 1 = 2), it's an argument that we can only distinguish between numbers of things by relation of one set of things to another set of things."-I don't want to spoil the fun, and of course I can only go by what you have told us about this book, but aren't you being led off the track? You have said that the whole thing is meant to be an attack on materialism, and in your post of 23 October at 21.54 you made it clear that in this chapter he is trying to prove Cartesian dualism, i.e. that "there is mind, and there is matter". He can faff around as much as he likes with his ones and twos, but there is no way that he or anyone can prove mathematically that consciousness and identity are not extensions of matter.

The Case for Dualism

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Tuesday, November 02, 2010, 02:43 (5134 days ago) @ dhw

Matt continues to wrestle with Martin's case for dualism:
> "His argument here isn't simple mathematics (such as 1 + 1 = 2), it's an argument that we can only distinguish between numbers of things by relation of one set of things to another set of things."
> 
> I don't want to spoil the fun, and of course I can only go by what you have told us about this book, but aren't you being led off the track? You have said that the whole thing is meant to be an attack on materialism, and in your post of 23 October at 21.54 you made it clear that in this chapter he is trying to prove Cartesian dualism, i.e. that "there is mind, and there is matter". He can faff around as much as he likes with his ones and twos, but there is no way that he or anyone can prove mathematically that consciousness and identity are not extensions of matter.-I think perhaps I just put the support in for the bridge, and skipped the rest of the bridge...-He goes back to that clumsy mathematical pull to make the point that 'two' is more fundamental than 'one.' He's not talking explicitly about applying math to consciousness, only speaking that, crudely, 'all things come in twos.' To Martin, we 'think' there's consciousness, but he views non-consciousness as important too, because by his reasoning, we can only 'know' consciousness by comparing our selves (conscious beings) to inanimate matter. So, since there is consciousness (1) and inanimate matter in the world (2) than there is fundamentally two things in the universe; mind and matter. -It's not terribly convincing to me either.

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

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