Sushan wrote: ↑June 12th, 2025, 7:56 pm If such mental elements can be real in a mind-only universe, why should they lose that status in a universe where they coexist with matter?
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 10:03 am Do they? I'm not clear what you're saying here. Real mental elements remain real regardless of the presence of matter, I think.
Sushan wrote: ↑June 14th, 2025, 1:51 am Yes — exactly! I am glad we are on the same page there.I agree, but I think your last few words are misunderstanding what I was saying? Our thoughts have reality, of a sort. I think most of us would agree, although there are significant differences between them and material objects. But maps and the territory is another matter.
My point was more rhetorical than literal.
If we are willing to grant full ontological status to mental phenomena in a mind-only scenario, then shouldn’t we also grant them equal footing in a mixed reality—rather than relegating them to the role of internal “maps” pointing to a supposedly more real “territory”?
The territory is the real world. In contrast, our maps contain our thoughts *about* reality, things that (we hope) help us understand reality, but are not (in this sense) part of reality, of the territory. So I would not deny the (obvious?) reality of our thoughts, but I would see them as being map-based.
This sounds a bit confusing, because I'm offering two different perspectives here simultaneously. Yes, the thoughts are real, but no, they aren't strictly part of the territory, I don't think. But I see your points too. And I wouldn't argue strongly that our thoughts are map-based; I think they are maybe both, depending on the perspective we take?
"Who cares, wins"