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Sorry Latil, but your use to declare things wrong based on your argument is just laughable.
Sort of like how I have to chuckle every time you misspell my handle...
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And you haven't in any way proved me wrong. All your doing is declaring it. But by the imposition of your logic that we can or cannot prove anything about existence that you want to use to say that my argument is false is simply twisted that logic to fit your situation and not mine.
Once again (I've said it five times now) I am not addressing your personal situation. I am addressing your logic. What you believe is your business, and I can't, shouldn't, and won't argue about it. Trying to keep up the same tired argument that "you're imposing your beliefs on me" doesn't work, when I am not imposing my beliefs on you.
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you cannot prove it as wrong, yet you feel capable of freely declare it as such
No. Again.
Your assumption of your correctness is wrong. I do not, in fact, make any claim that the original assertion of cogito ergo sum is incorrect, only that we cannot know it for truth.
Here, I'll talk slowly and with little words: I'm. Not. Disproving. ... You. Just. Can't. Prove.
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I personally feel that you are being overly obtuse with semantics rather than points and using logic in a rather limited way.
May I just say here, before responding, that trying to unravel these sentences is like doing crosswords.
But to respond: Semantics? Have I debated the meanings of terms with you, ever? In fact, it was you who started that whole "definition of meaning" thing. I just said you were wrong.
And what tricky words have I used in this discussion? I feel that I've been nothing but frank with you, which leads me to conclude that you are either putting up a strawman argument (heh) or you do not in fact know what the term 'semantics' means.
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This since you seem to stipulate that with the absence of a negative in meaning you cannot qualify a positive as a result. Where as all I'm saying is that the negative case of existence is meaningless to you from a logical view because the very definition of existence precludes a choice and it is the only experience that I have to substantiate existence to myself as an entity in the first place is my experience of my choices.
No. If you yourself are another's choice, then the other might exist but the entity 'you' does not, as such. Ultimately we are incapable of determining whether our natures are extant, and I am not so proud as to claim that I have explored the root of everything far enough to know whether even that thing which might be imagining us need exist itself. For I cannot prove its existence or nonexistence. Therefore possibilities exist beyond my perspective. This is what I say: your choices might not be choices at all! You might not be. Or you might be something else entirely. You don't know. ~waves arms wildly~
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This I will repeat does not prove that existence is there or not, all it means is that logically the only inference of meaning that has any relevance to myself is a positive one and to then being able to express this in a mutually humanistic way with others.
Remember the 'cold hard logic world?' You know, the one I referenced in the last post? Yeah, that's the world we're talking in, and in that world meaning
does not influence existence. You might not be there, and while that might be meaningless to you, we cannot deny the possibility! You're trying to. Stop it.
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You seem to want to separate the experience of your reality or understanding and simply surmise it as a logical statement that it can or cannot exist...But this is where you stop in all you want to explore as your understanding, you don't seem to want to understand the personal relevance of this. And I think and believe that the extension of understanding of what reality is and being able to convey it's personal qualities and interactions from your point of view is a much more tangible notion to you as an entity that you exist. So I'm sorry I won't simply dismiss the experience of reality and its relevance to the argument as a result. If anything it should make you question things from this perspective and explore these interactions in the hope to provide a greater personal understanding of your reality not simply dismissed.
Mighty presumptive of you. Contrary to your assertion that meaning can only be found in a world where I exist, I think we can explore the world where I don't exist just as easily. After all, I've never held it against a thing that it didn't exist (unlike
some ~cough cough~).
And you jump to conclusions in assuming that because I can't prove I exist I'm without an exploration of life in the positive side. We all know that assuming makes an ******* of u and I. And you're wrong besides: Stopping at the point where we can't prove whether we exist or not does
not mean that we have to stay there. We can explore both the nonexistent side and that which exists. We're actually more free to observe, without proof. I support the
open-minded side of this argument.
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Anyhow we seem to have moved onto Cosmic bricks now so ...
Metaphor. Meta. Phor. ~slams head into wall~ Metaphor.
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Lets use this as a useful analogy then and say that since a brick cannot think and understand its own experience of existence does it exist? Well it can exist of course, but for it to have any purposeful meaning to it as a reality or having a cognition or awareness of existence it needs to be able to process that experience and interact with it to have a notion of what existence is.
Splendidly done. But not what we're talking about. We're addressing the question of 'does it exist?' Not 'can it exist.' Not 'how does it get meaning out of its existence.' Just, does it exist?
The answer is "I don't know." You seem to think that the answer should always be "yes, as long as its sentient." That 'always' bit is what I'm saying is wrong.
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I'm really intrigued now as to what your thoughts are on the brick cognition. And also the fact that you seem to place a distinction of sentience onto the cosmic variety. I think this should hopefully indicate that you consider the average household brick to be non-sentient and that the above convergence of my thought processes might actually start to inspire you to see this question of existence as more than a logical equation.
To be completely honest, I don't have the same fascination with fish and bricks that you do.
I used an example. And a metaphor.
Those things are what's known 'in the biz' as symbolic language. They're symbols. You're treating them like prima-facia truths. That is either a critical failure to understand, or the saddest trolling I've ever seen.
So! To switch it up, I'll ask: what if we're all just dreams in the fevered mind of a sentient banana somewhere? (and if you start talking about bananas in the next post I'll switch to shoes, or octopi, or crows. Any length to get you to understand what 'symbol' means.)