Ty for clearing that up by calling facts "raw data".
Can raw data that is false be a fact?
Data isn't true or false, it just is. You're making a category error.
What part of proposition #1 or #3 look like "experiences" to you?
I do something, it seems to have a cause. I have bodily sensation, but somehow experience myself as an integrated whole. Both of those are directly drawn from everyday experience.
Ok....well I'll see if you can regard facts as false before I tell you how you are wrong.
Likely just going to be more of a comprehension error on your part, as that's all that you've presented so far.
I don't know and I've certainly never met any such experts.
Seems to me most people reckon themselves experts in such things. If only because we have no other choice.
That's literally what Occam formulated it as. Simple has a very specific definition when Occam's razor is mentioned, and it is about limiting ad hoc adjustments and taking on the fewest number of assumptions.
That seems like a dodge. Is that or is that not your basic assumption in order to gather truth?
Ok.
You said you only knew one truth. No offense, but the mind-body problem isn't in the bible tmk.
I do know only one truth, everything else is best estimates. The Bible is not my only truth, and I don't presume the literal meanng to be the primary sense to take it in. Nor do I hold it beyond question.
Ok.
Ok.
That's exactly what it was.
No, it was deliberate and through a logical procedure. There's nothing ad hoc about it, because I'm not trying to prevent an assumption from being falsified.
Removing a term changes the original statement.
Not if it follows a consistent procedure. I used the law of identity to uncouple an assumption of physicalism from the empirically supported closure principle through applying the law of identity. If natural=physical were true then removing it in the fashion I did wouldn't change the situation. And uncoupling a term into two distinct propositions is generally a valid operation, unless you have some procedural objection to make.
Go back and read the law of identity.
I don't need to "read the law of identity". It's simply that a=a and wll always be a true statement, in this case nature=nature. Since nature has to be nature, but nature doesn;'t have to be physical, I can separate out physical closure into closure on the natural and the hypothesis that natural=physical and then consider that hypothesis on its own terms.
Definition nuetral. Hilarious. Is that any different from Definition missing?
No, the definitions in this case would likely be ostensive but what we consider those definitions to be doesn't matter. This type of analysis is examining concepts independent of the language we put them in by considering the relationships between the words. But the meaning of the words isn't as important because the whole process hinges on whether or not nature is natural.
This can be restated as natural = physical. Let's not multiply entities needlessly.
That would require justification of some sort, and I'm all ears if you want to make a case for it that isn't just begging the question. I can understand why you're having trouble with this, because it's typically not something that justification is asked for. But we can't just define nature how we want to understand it, which is what you're doing here.
I already asked if natural = physical and you said no.
Yeah, I don't believe it's a true statement. It's often an assumption that people make and then fail to justify, but it is the physicalist hypothesis which I used the law of identity to separate from closure.
Are you now saying it does?
Nope, I'm saying that's the hypothesis that I removed from the set of propositions that led to the dissolution of a conflict in our observations. In short, if I haven't made a procedural error mental phenomenon falsify the physicalist hypothesis. And rather than wrestling with that, those who have turned to science for salvation and solace keep crying in faith "We just need more data!" and refuse to even consider that their assumption may very well be false. At least, the mind-body problem presents a serious challenge to such an assumption.