Discussion about this post

User's avatar
D.W. Frauenfelder's avatar

Thank you for this. It's corresponding with some things I've been thinking about for a while and is helping to give those things some more academic framing.

Expand full comment
Michael Kowalik's avatar

That we are subjectively aware of states of mind we call ‘experiences’ does not imply that what those states of mind are about, their meaning-content, is real or true. The sense of truth/reality is a normative principle that our states of mind are subject to, or else it would hold trivially for all subjective content, therefore would not be normative about the distinction between true/false, real/unreal, therefore meaningless. Another way, our subjective states cannot be subject to a normative principle if the principle is subject to our subjective states. Consequently, the idea of ‘subjective truth’ is equivalent to ‘subjective objectivity’, logically inconsistent, non-sense, and must be rejected. Our truth-claims and subjective ascriptions may be validated and thus made objective only by relating to the subjective states of others in a way that makes common, integrated sense. For this reason it can be said that there can be no monadic, alienated consciousness, experiences or phenomenality, which are properties that are meaningful only for a multiplicity of conscious beings vis-a-vis one another.

Expand full comment
2 more comments...

No posts