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Outlining A Functional Mental Reality Theory

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By accepting the fundamental, unequivocal logical fact that our experiential existence is necessarily, entirely mental in nature, and accepting the unambiguous scientific evidence that supports this view, we can move on to the task of developing a functioning and useful theory of mental reality. I will attempt to roughly outline such a theory here, with the caveat that trying to express such a theory in language that is thoroughly steeped in external, physical world ideology is at best difficult. Another caveat would be that, even though the categorical nature of the theory probably cannot be disproved (mental reality would account for all possible experiences,) some models might prove more useful and thus be better models.

IMO, the phrase “we live in a mental reality,” once properly understood, is realized as a self-evident truth. Self-evident truths cannot be “disproved.”

For any particular theory to even get off the ground, there must be a structure that can organize it into something comprehensible, testable (for usefulness), and which corresponds to current experience while making predictions and retrodictions.

There are at least two indisputable structures to mind and how it generates experience; logic and mathematics. These may be two different ways of expressing the same universal principle of mind. In this model, this “mathlogical” principle is that which takes a set of information and processes it into experience. I’m going to simplify the term and say it this way: experience is the algorithmic expression of a data set.

The data set that the algorithm processes can be roughly stated as that set of data which represents the mental structures we identify as individuals. No two individuals are comprised by the exact same identity set or they would be the same person, which follows the logical principle of identity.

And so, no two people experience the same exact thing even though the algorithm follows the same rules for expression. Two individuals can be connect to the some or even much of the same data, but not all of it. Note: there are infinite varieties of data sets because there is infinite information available that can be arranged an infinite number of ways.

Innumerable individuals can have included in their individual data sets large blocks of arranged information which they are, essentially, sharing. The algorithmic expression of such data blocks, even with innumerable individual variances of data not contained in the shared data block, could result in what we observe as a shared, external, physical world. In fact, it may be that the “external physical world” is a data block that acts as filtering information that other individual information is processed through – at least to a large degree.

And so, we experience what seems to be a consistent, shared “world” that is governed by logic and math. However, the model is fundamentally incomplete unless we bring in another fundamental quality of experience: free will.

In this model, free will is precisely defined as the capacity to unilaterally, free of both the data and the algorithmic process, direct one’s attention. It is absolutely free and unfettered, and as such it is also ineffable. Free will represents a single variable in the algorithm. Although this variable cannot change the principles by which the algorithm processes the data into experience, the variable establishes what information is included in the data set the algorithm is procedurally processing into experience.

Usually, people use their free will capacity in no other way than to provide an experience-sustaining feedback loop. We focus our attention on the current expression of the data set and largely limit our attention to that which is logically implied by what the algorithm is already producing. We’re usually trapped in our own feedback loop because we identify with the algorithmic expression we experience as the very definition of what is real. Oddly, as a result of confusing cause and effect, we erroneously think that our experience is caused by what we experience, when that can’t possibly be the case. It’s logically absurd.

In this model, we actually have the free will capacity to put our attention on any information, even if it is “outside” of our current identity data set and outside of what we’re experiencing as “shared physical reality.” We can set this variable of the algorithm to refer back to any information we want out of infinite information available. We call this capacity our “imagination.”

Boom! Mental reality without a trace of solipsism.

Comments
Fasteddious @4:
If “our experiential existence is necessarily, entirely mental in nature”, then how can, “the unambiguous scientific evidence” support that view? ALL the scientific evidence is obtained using equipment and experimental setups that assume and utilize matter and energy.
Not sure I understand your question. In the theory, there is no matter or energy, only mental phenomena we experience as such. The equipment are mental constructs. Our very bodies are mental constructs. The reason the quantum results come back the way they do is because they are not actually experimenting on or with physical things. We're actually conducting mental tests on the nature of our experiences, even if we assume we are not. There's nothing else to conduct a test on or with.
Using science based on matter and energy and the assumption of an external physical world to “prove” that matter does not exist and that the only reality is mental does not seem like a promising approach to “proving” idealism. If no external material reality exists, then why base metaphysical or philosophical arguments on the basis of material evidence that assumes realism?
First, there's no such thing as "material evidence" because it is a logical and a practical impossibility. Second, it doesn't matter what you assume you are investigating; under mental reality theory, the only thing you can actually be investigating is the nature of mental experience. All evidence gathered under any paradigm necessarily would support a well-made mental reality theory, because all evidential processes and facts are experienced in mind.William J Murray
October 10, 2020
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'Moored' and 'unmoored' are metaphorical expressions. And what kind of reality do metaphorical expressions possess? Why, semantic. Which again is a product of mind. Naturalism simply assumes the primacy of the objective. When pressed, it then tries to present objective reasons for this assumption - which is another way of stating the infinite regress at its basis,Circadian
October 10, 2020
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Fasteddious, You might want to look into the numerous scientific experiments affirming superposition, the collapse of the wave function, entanglement, the quantum zeno effect, and quantum erasure. There's tons of scientific evidence. The experimental results are considered incontrovertible, but the interpretations on what these results mean with regard to reality are confusing, shocking, and wildly controversial. -QQuerius
October 10, 2020
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If "our experiential existence is necessarily, entirely mental in nature", then how can, "the unambiguous scientific evidence" support that view? ALL the scientific evidence is obtained using equipment and experimental setups that assume and utilize matter and energy. Using science based on matter and energy and the assumption of an external physical world to "prove" that matter does not exist and that the only reality is mental does not seem like a promising approach to "proving" idealism. If no external material reality exists, then why base metaphysical or philosophical arguments on the basis of material evidence that assumes realism?Fasteddious
October 10, 2020
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1 Seversky
but if you unmoor our conscious experience from any external reality
Lololol! What are you talking about, delusional kiddo? Your materialist superstition collapses into subjective idealism. Naturalism's Epistemological Nightmare
"Empirical verification presupposes epistemological realism—meaning that through sensation we know directly the exterior physical world around us. Natural science proclaims that it discovers the nature of the real physical cosmos, external to our brains or subjective selves. Yet, when we trace the optics and physiology of the sense of sight, we find ourselves entrapped in epistemological idealism -- meaning that we do not know external reality, but rather merely some change within our brains that we hope to be an accurate representation of the external world." Dr. Dennis Bonnette. https://strangenotions.com/naturalisms-epistemological-nightmare/
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In fact, while it is fun to play around with such concepts,
Coming from an evo/ materialist whose weird ideology leads to global skepticism. Naturalism's Global Skepticism Plantinga's EAAN
In this dissertation, I explicate and defend Plantinga’s attack on philosophical naturalism. My thesis is that it has survived all the current attacks available in the literature.
You are a joke.Truthfreedom
October 10, 2020
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Seversky said:
Some sort of mental reality is certainly possible but if you unmoor our conscious experience from any external reality then why do we experience anything at all and what can it be other than a fantasy?
I explained what we are experiencing. The word "fantasy" only has meaning in an external-reality perspective.
The nature of entangled particle pairs and any apparent research into them are meaningless because neither photons nor entanglement exist at all.
They exist as experiences, which is all we have of "reality" in any event, under any model. Any "meaning" for any experiential pursuit is a quality of individual experience.
This would also be true of our memories of the past. How could we know if any of it happened or whether we came into existence last Thursday with an apparently complete set of entirely fictional memories?
Memories, in mental reality theory, are not what they are in current external reality theory. Regardless of theory, the only "time" you actually exist is "now," and certain kinds of mental qualia, regardless of theory, serve to orient the individual within their experience.
In fact, while it is fun to play around with such concepts, if it were true it would make the entire human explanatory enterprise – philosophy, science, religion, logic mathematics – pointless. There is nothing to explain. Beyond what am I and why am I experiencing what I am experiencing, that is.
Well, if you mean there's nothing left to explain, at least on an existential and "how existence works" level, I agree. This theory explains everything. You're welcome.William J Murray
October 10, 2020
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Intertwined thoughts are the only reality. We choose our reality by choosing what thought(s) to believe. There are 2 primordial thoughts : a very intelligent God or a very intelligent chaos. ? Chaos(blind natural laws) don't produce thoughts because thoughts are not matter so an intelligent human being would believe in the right primordial thought.JohnB
October 10, 2020
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Some sort of mental reality is certainly possible but if you unmoor our conscious experience from any external reality then why do we experience anything at all and what can it be other than a fantasy? If there is no external reality then all the weird and wonderful phenomena of the quantum level of external reality are just fantasies. The nature of entangled particle pairs and any apparent research into them are meaningless because neither photons nor entanglement exist at all. This would also be true of our memories of the past. How could we know if any of it happened or whether we came into existence last Thursday with an apparently complete set of entirely fictional memories? In fact, while it is fun to play around with such concepts, if it were true it would make the entire human explanatory enterprise - philosophy, science, religion, logic mathematics - pointless. There is nothing to explain. Beyond what am I and why am I experiencing what I am experiencing, that is.Seversky
October 10, 2020
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