Friday, July 27, 2012

An Argument for Idealism (of the Berkeleyan Sort)

 I wrote this as an example paper for a Philosophy class a few years back.  It articulates a case for idealism.

Having examined the arguments for and against materialism, dualism, and idealism, I believe that idealism is the right answer. Dualism and materialism both lack evidence to support their claims, and they lead to absurdities when examined closely. Idealism is based squarely on the empirical evidence, and it leads to no absurdities (although it tends to rub our biases the wrong way).

Dualism is the position that most of our minds (at least in this culture) tend to gravitate towards as the default position. Perhaps part of it is that we tend to like anything that sounds middle-groundish; we are a culture that loathes anything that sounds extreme. Dualism posits that there are two fundamentally different substances in the universe--consciousness and mind-independent matter (let’s call the latter MIM from now on as a shorthand). I think there are some serious, unsolvable problems with this viewpoint. One problem with dualism is that we have no evidence whatsoever for the existence of MIM. All we ever actually perceive are collections of sensory qualities--touch, sound, taste, color, smell, etc. These are qualities that inherently assume minds that they are in. To conceive of texture, for instance, apart from a mind experiencing the sense of touch is impossible, because that experience makes up the very essence of the concept of texture. One may point out that of course we never observe anything but sensory qualities, since we have to observe things through our senses. Granted, but the point still remains. We never observe anything but sensory characteristics. We never observe MIM. So why believe in it? Some might argue MIM is necessary to explain our experience of sensory qualities. However, not only is MIM unnecessary to explain our experiences, it is impossible for MIM to explain them. Why? Because MIM cannot be the cause of our sensory impressions. If MIM exists, it is a substance utterly different from consciousness. Particles of MIM can, presumably, influence other particles of MIM, and you can have complex MIM objects made up of MIM particles. But MIM particles, being made of a fundamentally different substance from consciousness, would not be able to cause effects in consciousness, in the mind. If the mind is not a physical (in the MIM sense) thing, then how could physical forces affect it? Physical forces could influence physical objects, but a physical force could never influence a non-physical object. Nor could a non-physical force ever affect a physical object--only a physical force could do that. This seems self-evident from observing the very concepts of a physical object/force (in a MIM sense) and a non-physical object/force. So if these two substances exist, they could never interact with each other, which means that MIM could not be the cause of our sensory experiences. So our experiences give us no evidence for the existence of MIM at all. And not only is there no evidence for the existence of MIM, but since dualism requires that MIM and consciousness interact with each other in a coherent system, the impossibility of such interaction is itself another argument against dualism.

Another problem with the concept of MIM is that we really have no idea in our minds that corresponds to it. That is, when we talk about MIM, we have no idea what we are talking about. Take a table, for example. A table, as we experience it, is a collection of sensory qualities. According to the MIM theory, the reason I am observing the sensory qualities of a table is because there exists a mind-independent object, an object independent of anything that implies impressions on a mind, that is causing that image to be reflected onto my mind. But what would such an object be like? We must remove from the concept any characteristics that require the idea of a mind perceiving, which means we must remove from our idea of the object texture, sound, smell, color, shape, and taste. All of these sorts of characteristics imply a mind that is observing. Shape, for example, implies a particular viewpoint from which the shape is viewed, implying a mind viewing. All ideas of texture imply a particular experience of touch experienced by a mind. Once you separate all qualities that are connected to the mind perceiving/sensing, there is no idea left. Its very essence is gone. Now, it might be pointed out that of course this is the case, because since we are minds, we cannot imagine anything without tying it to our minds. Granted, but the point still remains. We have no real concept of anything apart from sensory characteristics. Sensory characteristics make up the very essence of our ideas of material objects. So when we talk about MIM objects, we really have no idea in our minds of what such a thing would be. Perhaps this wouldn’t be a big deal if we had evidence that such things existed--not knowing what something is like is not itself evidence that it does not exist--but in this case, we have no evidence that such things exist at all, as I have shown above.

Another problem with dualism is that the concept of two fundamentally different substances existing in the same universe/reality is absurd. We can imagine two physical objects existing in reality--say, a soccer ball and a tree--because they are the same sort of thing. They have physical characteristics, they can affect each other, they are in space in positions relative to each other (for example, the soccer ball might be 20 meters to the south of the tree). But what would it mean to have a physical object like a soccer ball existing in reality with a non-physical object like a mind? How would they relate to each other? Where would the mind be in relation to the soccer ball? How could the ball relate to another object in any other way than spatially? How could the non-physical mind, which is not a spatial object, relate to an object that is spatial in its nature? Trying to relate the two together would be trying to put together two mutually exclusive visions of what a “real object” is. It is like the metaphysical version of trying to run an old Apple computer program on an IBM. They aren’t compatible. And not only that, but if there are two fundamentally different substances in reality, they cannot have a common source. They would have to have independent sources. Not having a common source, they would be utterly independent and thus have nothing at all in common. They would not even share a common framework as parts of a larger reality. They would not share the same laws of logic or physics, etc. They could not be parts of a larger whole, which they would have to be in order to both exist in reality. So it is absurd to suppose that there is more than one fundamental substance in the universe. All of these arguments show that dualism is completely unviable as a view of the nature of the substance of the universe.

Materialism is another of the three possible views. It holds that there is only one fundamental substance in the universe, and that substance is MIM (mind-independent matter). It is obvious that many of the objections raised against dualism are going to apply against materialism as well. There is no evidence for the existence of MIM, we have no idea of what MIM would be, etc. Materialism appears on the surface to avoid the gap problems that dualism is prone to--that is, it seems to avoid the problem of trying to get two fundamentally different substances to relate to each other. However, I think it does have a very similar gap problem; it just gets to it by a different route. Materialists believe that consciousness is a product of the interaction of MIM particles. There is a universe full of mind-independent, non-conscious particles. When these particles interact in certain complex ways, materialists argue, consciousness is produced, mind is produced, with its thoughts, emotions, etc. The problems here is that if you arrange mind-independent, non-conscious particles together, what you get is a more complex mind-independent, non-conscious object. You don’t get consciousness. It doesn’t matter how many MIM particles you have or how complexly you arrange them together--no matter what you do with them, arranging MIM particles together will only produce a complex MIM object or system; it cannot produce something other than MIM, like mind/consciousness. If the particles are not mind, the object/system produced by their assembly will not be mind either, because nothing other than non-mind has been added to it. If the particles are not conscious, the object/system will be non-conscious as well, because nothing other than non-conscious matter has been introduced. All that changes is that now you have a complex system of mind-independent, non-conscious particles instead of a bunch of MIM particles floating about separately. Nothing in the whole thing is conscious, so the whole thing will be a non-conscious, mind-independent machine. As you can see, when you press it, materialism ends up turning into a kind of dualism. Instead of starting with two fundamentally different substances, like traditional dualism, materialism has a new substance created from an old one, which doesn’t solve old problems but instead creates new ones. The only way out of this would be for materialists to deny the existence of consciousness/mind. They could just say that there is nothing in the entire universe but non-conscious, mind-independent particles and the machines they create. But to deny the existence of consciousness would be to deny the existence of the only thing for which we actually have direct, observable evidence in order to preserve a belief in a substance for which we have no observable or inferential evidence whatsoever--which would be the height of absurdity. So materialism must be ruled out as a viable option as well.

Idealism is the only view that can explain the data of our experience. It alone avoids falling into the traps of the other two, and it creates no logical or observational problems of its own. Idealism says that consciousness is the only substance that exists in reality. It denies the existence of MIM. This fits the facts, because consciousness is all we observe to exist and have evidence for; MIM is a concept we have no idea of and no evidence for. Idealism has no gap problem like the other two views, because it alone (besides the version of materialism that denies the existence of consciousness) does not end up positing more than one fundamental substance.

There are a few objections that might be raised against idealism. One objection would be that it seems absurd to say that all objects in the world are collections of sensory qualities. Doesn’t it seem odd to say that when I eat an apple, I am eating an idea? When I walk across a room, I am walking across an idea? Well, yes, it sounds strange to put it that way. But we must remember that “idea” in idealism is broader than the way we use the word in causal conversation--it means not just some visual image I have in my head but includes all sensory perceptions, everything relating to touch, sound, sight, smell, and taste. When I eat an apple, the whole process never involves, as far as I can see, anything but a large and complex collection of sensory experiences. The same applies to walking across a room, or any other activity. Why do we eat in idealism? Because we are a small part of reality, and we grow by taking into us in various ways more of reality. We are interacting and growing in a very complex sensory environment in which there are many ways to interact and relate to things. But nothing that we do requires or implies the existence of anything other than sensory qualities. There is no logical problem here. The problem is that we are not used to thinking in terms of idealism and so the concept sounds weird to us. But “this sounds weird and is not what I thought” is not the same as “I have a rational argument against this.” We must learn to distinguish between these two things.

Another objection that might be raised against idealism is that it requires the concept of a universal mind in order to work. It is obvious that it is not only in my mind that things exist. The world has an existence independent of my association or causation. Therefore, idealists need to posit that there is a universal mind in which all sensory objects exist, and we sense things by means of participation in, or borrowing from (however you want to put it), this larger mind. An objector might argue that to posit such a being is an enormous leap and thus makes idealism suspect. There are two parts to the idealist response here: 1. If idealism has to make a leap here, what about materialism and dualism? They have to bring in MIM to make their systems work. We’ve seen that MIM is a substance which no one has any idea of, for which there is no evidence at all, and which brings with it a number of unsolvable absurdities. So if there is a problem here for idealism, it is certainly at least no less of a problem for materialism and dualism. 2. Is it a leap to bring in a universal mind? Even if it is a leap, is it as big a leap as bringing in MIM? That depends on what one thinks of the arguments for and against such a universal mind, and whether one thinks such a concept is logically tenable. This would bring us into theistic-atheistic arguments over the existence and nature of God, which we obviously do not have the time to delve into here. If God (what theists call a universal mind) is a logically problematic concept, then idealism has a serious problem here, but so do materialism and dualism; so they are all on the same level, they are all fundamentally flawed. If the concept of God is not logically problematic, but there is simply no evidence for such a being, then idealism has perhaps made a leap in bringing in God, but it is a logical and rationally acceptable leap. It is bringing in a concept that has no logical problems, which is a reasonable move, whereas materialism and dualism have to bring in a concept that is fraught with logical problems. But if the classic theistic arguments for God are good arguments (as I believe they are), then we have much independent reason to believe that there is a universal mind, and so bringing such an entity into the picture would not only be logically OK, but it would not even be making a leap at all. It would be bringing in something we already knew had to be there from other independent lines of evidence. So idealism would not be making a leap; rather, it would be providing another line of evidence for the existence of God, and it would be totally in accord with what we have already learned that the universe is like.

Another objection that might be made against idealism is that it denies the existence of material objects, which we can clearly see exist all around us. But, of course, this is just verbal confusion. Idealists do not deny the existence of material objects; they simply disagree with materialists and dualists about the nature of those objects. Idealists actually affirm the existence of material objects far more straightforwardly than do materialism and dualism. These latter views, in looking at a table, for example, have to say, “This sensory appearance of a table is not actually the table itself. The table itself is an object that exists apart from all texture, sound, color, shape, smell, and taste, an object that we have no idea of and no evidence for. That object (we know not where it is, since it is inherently unobservable) somehow creates the impression of a table on our minds (even though the impression, being made up of sensory qualities, is nothing like the original thing), by means of a physical force creating a non-physical effect, somehow.” An idealist looks at a table and says, “That collection of sensory qualities you actually see right in front of you, with its particular texture, color, etc.--that thing is itself the table. There is no unknown and unknowable object behind it that is the real table. We can actually observe the table itself.” Whose view does a simpler, more straightforward job of affirming the existence of the material objects we actually observe? Whose view avoids unsolvable complexities and simply affirms that which is self-evident?

I can think of no other objections against the idealist position. In light of all of the above, I conclude that materialism and dualism are false and that idealism is true.

ADDENDUM 7/12/17:  I just put up another article making this argument here.

ADDENDUM 10/11/23:  I want to add something to my argument above.  I would go even further and say that not only do we have no evidence for MIM, not only do we have no actual idea with content of what MIM would be, but the very idea of MIM is absurd.  It is absurd because it posits physical objects that exist unperceived, while all the actual characteristics that anyone actually applies to the concept of a "physical object" can only exist by virtue of being perceived - color, texture, shape, etc.  But even more, I think the very idea of anything existing other than conscious experience is absurd.  To say that something exists is to say that it makes some difference.  It has some effect on something.  It shows up somewhere.  But what, ultimately, does an existing object have an effect on or make a difference to?  Where does it show up?  Or, in other words, what is it that actually experiences the existing object?  It can only be consciousness.  Consciousness is nothing other than the condition of having 1st-person experiences.  We can imagine physical objects affecting other physical objects, but that is only because our consciousness creates a canvas, so to speak, on which the affecting occurs.  For example, I can imagine one ball bumping into another ball and moving it.  But where is all this taking place ultimately?  On a canvas which is nothing other than someone's conscious experience.  You could draw a grid on that canvas, and the center of the grid would be the center of the viewpoint from which the conscious experiencer is viewing things.  (And you can do this with all sensory impressions, not just visual ones).  The very idea of existing cannot be separated from the idea of occurring on the canvas of conscious experience.  They ultimately mean the same thing.  It's really, fundamentally true at the deepest level that to be is to be perceived or to be a perceiver.  To exist, a being must either be a canvas of conscious experience (that is, be a perceiver) or be on a canvas of conscious experience (that is, be perceived by a perceiver).  I would challenge any thinker to come up with any idea of what existing means that doesn't boil down ultimately to having an effect on or showing up in the experience of some 1st person experiencer or being the 1st persion experiencer that is having the experiences.

Here is another article that gets at this same point.

14 comments:

Aaron said...

This is a very intriguing view, but it raises some questions. Here's the first that came to mind: How would an idealist fit imperceptible physical things (such as atoms and subatomic particles) into their view? While it is commonly believed that the macroscopic objects we perceive are made up of such things, we don't directly observe them. So would an idealist say they don't really exist, or perhaps that they only have a counterfactual existence (i.e., they WOULD exist if we could perceive things that small)?

Mark Hausam said...

Hi Aaron! Thanks for posting a comment! What brought you to this article?

With regard to your question, it is evident that the world extends beyond our own views of it or experience of it. We can encounter clues that lead us to find out things we didn't know before, we can explore and make new discoveries, the world goes on coherently beyond the vantage points of our experience, etc. As I pointed out in the article, idealists need to posit the existence of a universal mind in which all things ultimately are in order to account for this.

So atoms, subatomic particles, etc., exist outside our experience as the coherent continuation of the world we do experience, all of which is ultimately sustained by the universal mind.

Materialists and dualists posit MIM in order to account for the world going beyond our experience. The problem with this, as the article points out, is that the idea of a MIM object makes no sense. For one thing, if you remove from the idea of a physical object all its properties dependent on being perceived by a mind, there is nothing left of the idea. And there are other problems.

What do you think?

Aaron said...

Hi Mark,

I was checking out some other articles on your site (on apologetics and the myth of neutrality) and when I saw the "idealism" topic, I was curious as to what your thoughts were concerning it (and what kind of "idealism" you had in mind). While I can't say I consider myself an idealist just yet, my own dissatisfaction with both dualism and materialism has made me inclined to embrace a more plausible alternative if it were available, and idealism could very well be what I was looking for.

You said: "So atoms, subatomic particles, etc., exist outside our experience as the coherent continuation of the world we do experience, all of which is ultimately sustained by the universal mind."

But would you say that the objects we consciously experience (such as the desk in front of me) are made up of, or constituted by, atoms/subatomic particles, and that their existence is thus dependent on the existence of such imperceptible things? The reason I ask is because you seemed to suggest in your article that physical objects are nothing more than the sensory experience we have of them. For example, you wrote, "An idealist looks at a table and says, 'That collection of sensory qualities you actually see right in front of you, with its particular texture, color, etc.--that thing is itself the table. There is no unknown and unknowable object behind it that is the real table. We can actually observe the table itself.'" But unlike tables, things such as atoms and their constituents are imperceptible, and not part of our sensory experience. So if atoms and their constituents do make up the objects of which I have a sensory experience, then such objects (such as tables) would be more than simply "a collection of sensory qualities."

You also said, "For one thing, if you remove from the idea of a physical object all its properties dependent on being perceived by a mind, there is nothing left of the idea. And there are other problems."

But couldn't an atheist object that we DO, in fact, have ideas of physical objects even after we've removed from our ideas of them all experienced sensory qualities (i.e., atoms and their constituents organized in a certain way, which are not conceived of in terms of sensory qualities)?

Aaron

Mark Hausam said...

Hi Aaron,

Good questions.

Desks, etc., are definitely made up of atoms and subatomic particles. (We don't even need the scientists to tell us that. It is evident that matter is potentially infinitely divisible. But that raises other questions I won't get into right now.) We don't perceive subatomic particles directly, but, in principle, they are going to be the same sort of things that desks and lamps and other macro objects are, just smaller (and with properties matching their size, whatever those might be).

Whatever it is that makes a desk a physical object, clearly the particles that make up the desk must also be physical in the same way, or they would not be able to be the elements making up the desk. So what is it that makes something a physical object? The idealist answer is that physicality is sensory perceptions. So subatomic particles, if we could experience them, would be made up of sensory perceptions.

To be continued . . .

Mark Hausam said...

. . . Continued (the program wouldn't let me post it all in one post).

Idealism recognizes that there are things that are beyond our ability to experience, such as parts of the universe beyond the reach of our instruments. These objects, if we could perceive them, would have the same fundamental characteristics of physicality, such as texture, color, taste, shape (obviously some objects do not lend themselves to being tasted, etc., but what I am saying is that for all physical objects the substance will be sensory in nature). So in what way do they exist if we cannot perceive them? They exist as perceived in the universal mind, and as potentially perceivable by us (in that if certain changes were made in our abilities, such as being able to see further out in space or being able to experience things on a smaller level, we could perceive them).

Am I making sense? What you seem to be thinking is that micro-particles would have to be fundamentally different from macro-objects because the latter are made up of perceived sensory perceptions while the former, not being perceived by us, are not. What I am trying to say is that there is no basis for this idea. Subatomic particles have the same properties as macro-objects, the only difference being that the former are only potentially perceivable by us while some (but not all, and probably not even most) of the latter are actually perceived by us.

Imagine a star that no finite being has ever seen. How would such an object fit in in idealism? We would say that the star exists by virtue of two things: 1. It is perceived by the universal mind. 2. It is potentially perceivable by us, and functions as a coherent continuation of the universe actually perceived by us. I would say exactly the same thing about subatomic and other micro pieces of matter.

Does that help?

As I argued before, looking at a distant star or a subatomic particle as an object existing in a universal mind and as potentially perceivable by us makes far more sense than trying to explain its existence with MIM. The very idea of a physical object, including a star or a subatomic particle, is bound up with sensory qualities--either as actually perceived by us or as potentially perceivable by us and actually perceived by the universal mind. MIM posits a substance that is neither actually perceived nor potentially perceivable, for it is considered to be something other than perceptions (if it was nothing other than perceptions, we would simply have idealism and no MIM). This makes no sense of the fundamental idea of what a physical object is. But the idealist idea preserves the essence of what physicality means, whether we speak of objects perceived by us or objects potentially perceivable by us. Again, think of the star. We have discovered new stars we never saw before with new technology. Once the new stars are perceived, they are clearly made up of sensory qualities? So what were they before they were perceived by us? Not MIM, because then they would not be perceivable by us at all. They were objects actually perceived by the universal mind and potentially perceivable by us.

I'd better stop here. I'm starting to ramble a bit. :-) It's hard to describe these sorts of things, so I sometimes find myself saying the same things over and over in slightly different ways in the hope of communicating my ideas more clearly.

Let me know what you think.

Mark

Aaron said...

Thanks for your prompt response, Mark. I think you've answered my questions, and what you say makes sense. I'll let you know if I have any more questions while I continue to mull over this.

Aaron

Aaron said...

Thanks for your prompt response, Mark. I think you've answered my questions, and what you say makes sense. I'll let you know if I have any more questions while I continue to mull over this.

Aaron

Aaron said...

Oops, didn't mean to double post!

Unknown said...

Mark,

I enjoyed the read. I have a question: What’s your response to the idea that the First Mind could have creating beings that interact with matter as defined as MIM, but not First Mind-Independent Matter (FMIM)? In other words, absent a First Mind, dualism obviously falls, but could a First Mind design such a system that dualism describes? OR, do you feel the logical impossibility holds?

Mark Hausam said...

Hi Kevin,

My position is that MIM is intrinsically meaningless, impossible, and absurd, so it cannot be a product of God.

MIM is an idea that really has no content. MIM refers to material objects with all the mind-dependent characteristics that make up the essences of material objects removed. What is left of a chair, for example, when we've removed color, texture, sound, smell, taste, and even dimension (all of which can only exist in the mind's view of a chair)? It seems to me we have nothing at all. So a "MIM chair" is a content-less idea. We may use the words and think we are saying something, but we are only confused if we do so and are not adequately attending to the meaning (or lack thereof) of what we are saying.

Also, MIM is impossible and absurd. Consciousness clearly exists. The very idea of MIM implies that if it exists, it is something other than consciousness. It is some fundamentally different substance. But ultimately, there can only be one substance, for everything must be traced back to a single ultimate source. If God is a single, simple entity, then there can be no fundamentally different substances that don't ultimately resolve into each other.

Also, MIM and ideal objects would be incompatible with each other in terms of the context of reality. For example, if I have a MIM basketball, and a non-MIM desk, how do they relate to each other? The very idea of a material object like a desk suggests something that occupies some particular location relative to other objects around it. But "location" is a mind-dependent concept, so a MIM desk could have no location. It would have no place relative to other objects, and wouldn't even be an "object" in any meaningful sense at all.

So I think that dualism simply has to go and can never be brought back in at any point. But who needs it? Idealism accounts for everything perfectly. We only think we need it because we are confusing ourselves with lack of clarity in our ideas. We think that we would lose material objects like desks, for example, if we lost MIM. But that is not so. A desk has nothing MIM about it. It is a collection of mind-dependent qualities. We lose nothing of it by losing the meaningless and absurd idea of MIM.

Mark

Unknown said...

Thanks, Mark.

Great stuff. I’ve found that if idealism is properly explained, it’s very compelling. Being able to explain it takes more effort, in my view, than dualism – which is a big part of the problem many people have with it. They can’t wrap their mind around the idea that objects just ,aren’t figments of their imagination under idealism – it’s the, “But this chair exists!” type of thing.

I just found your site while doing a little reading on the subject. Looks like lots of great stuff here!
Thanks

Mark Hausam said...

"Being able to explain it takes more effort, in my view, than dualism – which is a big part of the problem many people have with it. They can’t wrap their mind around the idea that objects just ,aren’t figments of their imagination under idealism – it’s the, “But this chair exists!” type of thing."

Well said. I think that's exactly it.

Mark Hausam said...

We could also add that idealism makes God feel uncomfortably close to people who would really rather not deal with that. I think MIM partly functions as an attempt to find a hiding place for atheists.

Unknown said...

Exactly. No doubt about it.