The Members of TPF Exist
As someone who is genuinely interested in who I am while I am dreaming, I have been posed in a deep thought for the past few days. I understand that most philosophers still ignore dreams and may not take their content seriously, but what does happen when I am aware that I am interacting with you right now, as well as when I am dreaming?
Regardless of whether this belongs to epistemology, metaphysics, or psychology, I believe we should examine the extent to which you exist within my knowledge and consciousness.
I had a dream. A very basic and innocent dream. I was interacting with you here in TPF, noticing user names like "Jamal", "T Clark", and "Banno", and I was quite aware that you were also interacting with me, because of the notifications in "my mentions". It seemed very real until I woke up, and I asked myself: [i]What if your dreams are telling you you can see them there -in the world of dreams-, and you are creating that image to fool yourself into thinking they are there?[/I]
If someone asks me to "prove that TPF users exist," I might respond by saying they exist because they can cause certain experiences in me. But the argument becomes more solid when you appear in both my reality and my dreams. My point is not to justify your existence, but that you exist at least for me.
The source of dreaming with you is undoubtedly the experience, but who can tell that I am wrong if I believe it is also a way of suggesting that you exist?
Even if I was in a dream, my ability to have these thoughts, including interacting with you, proved your existence.
Regardless of whether this belongs to epistemology, metaphysics, or psychology, I believe we should examine the extent to which you exist within my knowledge and consciousness.
I had a dream. A very basic and innocent dream. I was interacting with you here in TPF, noticing user names like "Jamal", "T Clark", and "Banno", and I was quite aware that you were also interacting with me, because of the notifications in "my mentions". It seemed very real until I woke up, and I asked myself: [i]What if your dreams are telling you you can see them there -in the world of dreams-, and you are creating that image to fool yourself into thinking they are there?[/I]
If someone asks me to "prove that TPF users exist," I might respond by saying they exist because they can cause certain experiences in me. But the argument becomes more solid when you appear in both my reality and my dreams. My point is not to justify your existence, but that you exist at least for me.
The source of dreaming with you is undoubtedly the experience, but who can tell that I am wrong if I believe it is also a way of suggesting that you exist?
Even if I was in a dream, my ability to have these thoughts, including interacting with you, proved your existence.
Comments (39)
Does dreaming of Zeus prove that Zeus exists?
My dream was based on the experience of interacting with other living beings like me, not deities or gods. I believe that addresing Zeus is not particularly relevant to the existence of you, me, and the other members of this forum.
Youre arguing that dreaming of X is proof that X exists.
If the argument fails when X is Zeus then it fails when X is Michael.
No, it does not fail.
There are different subjects in your premises. Zeus is a deity, and its characteristics are based on Greek mythology. It is the subject of a "myth", nothing close to something real.
Meanwhile, Michael or Javi is real, because you are causing me to feel certain experiences. There are some chances that you might appear in my dreams, because the source of your existence (at least in what I consider real) is based in my experience of interacting with you. Then, you exist.
I have never experienced Zeus, nor did I dream with him. I think it is pretty obvious the cause: his source of existence is missing.
However, the source of your existence is obvious to me.
Youre begging the question.
Your argument is now if I dream of X and if X exists then X exists.
When I have been interacting on the forum, I find that it affects both my conscious experience and dreams. At times, the communication seems more real if I know a little about the person I am communicating with.
At times, I have dreamt that I am interacting on the forum and either disappointed or relieved that the exchange was not 'real'. At one point, I even dreamt that my own threads were rolled up as scrolls beside my bed. The experience of communicating on the forum seems to make philosophy surreal. Previous to that my own philosophy reading felt rather lonely and cut off, so I have felt some validification as a thinker in interaction on the forum. I don't mind the surreal aspect because, in a way all communication is surreal in the sense that communication between others involves imaginary aspects of listening and interpretation.
I guess you disagree with my notion, right?
I know that feeling. I experienced something similar. After waking up, I felt disappointed because the mentions were all products of my dream. Nonetheless, I still think that my dream did not cheat me because I actually dreamt with people who I interact with in this forum. If they also appear in my dreams, then they have to be real. You evoke certain experiences in me that lead me to believe you exist.
You've used the phrase "dreaming with" several times, whereas "dreaming of" sounds more apt. It's kind of odd because in order to dream with someone you'd have to share in the same content.
Joseph Campbell called myth (shared narrative/ideas about what is) communal dream. So maybe we can stretch this to the concept of dreams/reality as the domain of social constructions, reality as shared/directed hallucination.
The frustration of a lucid dream is apparent in and round those rare moments when you take what is occurring in a dream to be reality. The only notable example of this was thinking I had a drawer full of cash, which evaporated on waking. :groan:
Im saying that your argument is fallacious.
Either its a non sequitur because therefore X exists does not follow from I dreamed of X or it begs the question because youve independently assumed that X exists (and in which case your dream is irrelevant).
It was a grammar oopsie, sorry.
Quoting Nils Loc
It is frustrating butsatisfactory at the same time. Lucid dreams are fun, yet I think I should not consider my dream as lucid because I wasn't aware that I was dreaming of you. I came to this conclusion when I woke up.
Whether my dream is irrelevant or not is not the case, Michael. The point is that I have knowledge and consciousness that you exist because you caused me certain experiences in both dreams and reality. Disagreeing with my point may mean that you do not exist in one of these. :sad:
I am interacting with you right now, so you exist. Wait when I dream of you. :cool:
Here and in several other cases you are presuming your conclusion, that we exist. Only if we exist, have we caused these experiences in you, in reality. (But much less so in dreams. It seems more accurate to say that your mind, creatively using these experiences as a foundation, synthesized your dreams. We have no causal efficacy in what specifically did and didn't happen in your dreams.)
Suppose that I, and everyone else but you on this site, were all AI personas. If so, we would impart the same experiences to you, and you would have the same dreams about them. So these experiences and dreams themselves cannot prove that we are not AI. You might argue in various ways that this AI hypothesis is profoundly unlikely, and I would agree. But I don't think you can prove it is not the case.
First, I think I didn't claim that your existence made a cause in my dreams, and I did because I write a lot of word salad. I am sorry because it wasn't my intention. What I said is that the source of your existence seems legit to me because I had (literally) the same experience of interacting with you in both reality and dreams. For me, this is more than sufficient to claim that you actually exist. This is not about identifying a cause, but rather exploring the origin of why you influence certain experiences or stimuli in my life.
On the other hand, I even believe that my point would also be plausible if you were AI, because my argument is that I suggest you exist because you interfere in me. It is not possible to dream of God or Zeus because they never made an impact on me. But I consider it plausible to dream of you, Michael or Baden. Isn't this a good starting point to consider people real?
Dream Michael is an incarnation of Zeus... He is sporting a gilded purple himation right now in a aural sphere on planet Jupiter in the eye of the red storm. Hopefully this suggestion will have amusing effects.
"Even the gods who are not his natural children address him as Father, and all the gods rise in his presence." (Homer) Guess it comes with being a mod.
But you are resistant to silly associative contamination for good reasons. No amount of telling you that Michael is (like) Zeus will make you believe that Michael is (like) Zeus.
But we should try anyway. Michael (what/which Michael?) is like Zeus (what/which Zeus?).
Quis ut Deus?
If it were then would it not be the case that God or Zeus is real for some, and not real for others?
That is, some would say that they have made an impact on them -- so just as I conclude that money is real so do I conclude that Zeus is real every time there's a lightning storm.
It might be.
But I hardly see the possibility of dreaming with God or Zeus in any circumstances. I just can't see it as plausible, even with the fact they are anthropomorphised, and my mind should easily be able to locate them in my dreams. But, for some reasons, they don't appear in my real life nor in my dreams. Therefore, I believe their existence is highly unlikely.
My point is that some may argue that Zeus made an impact on him. But, upon serious reflection, does Zeus really interfere with people while they are asleep? I think this is key. For the moment, you (members of TPF) caused certain experiences, things, episodes, etc. in both my real life and dreams. Therefore, your existence is more plausible than Zeus'.
This touches on an aspect of belief that Davidson focuses on: that no belief exists in isolation. Each of your beliefs is part of a web of inter-related beliefs. Your belief that Zeus is not real is a component of your cohesive worldview, it's ultimately bound up with everything else you believe, such as that strawberries are plants and clouds are made of water vapor. This web or field of beliefs, along with the concept of truth, essentially is your rationality. It can be updated, but not all at once, so in a sense it's self stabilizing.
And now you put your rationality to the job of determining its own foundations and effectiveness at delivering you reliable information. You're asking the eye to see itself. As always, it will go to work trying to give you the explanation you seek. That's what it does. It follows the Law of Explanation, which is that everything must have one, including the Law itself.
Quoting frank
Frank, I agree with all your post, and I see myself represented in it. Nonetheless, I don't seek for an answer. It is just that I realised something that is obvious but was hidden from me. That you exist. I don't think my thoughts are fallacious. Yes, it lacks better quality writing, but I follow Davidson's view on where my beliefs and rationality come from. I guess I refer to "source" when he talked about webs.
Quoting javi2541997
Doesnt the strange world of dreams teach us that just as important as the question of whether something exists is how it exists? Have you ever noticed that when you try to make sense of a dream strictly on the basis of remembered perceptual data (the identification of people, things and the actions that are being performed, like flying) the narrative of the dream appears bizarre and incoherent? And yet if asked to make sense of that narrative from the vantage of the emotions and feelings accompanying the perceived images and actions a much more intelligible picture emerges? For instance, one may perform an act, likely floating or flying, which in waking life would trigger feelings of joy, astonishment or terror.
But the emotions accompanying such feats in the dream may tell a very different story. One may feel bored , nonchalant or blasé, suggesting f that the meaning of the act should be sought in the kinds of waking activity that typically evoke such feelings. I suggest that if one wants to know what is really going on in the dream one needs to consult this affective narrative rather than the narrative of concrete perceptions and actions. This includes the identification of people in the dream. Dont be too sure youre dreaming about so and so just because the dream image looks like them. The feeling accompanying the image may lead you to someone else. And often, what starts out as one person morphs into someone else. Follow the feelings , not the images.
Maybe not Zeus, but Jesus Christ, Allah, and so on?
People have more than dreamt of them: They've had living visions, if we believe their testimonies. And those who testify as much clearly are influenced in their day-to-day life by these Gods given their various habits.
My point was to note that there are people out there that would utilize your criteria to come to conclude that Zeus -- or maybe other, more plausible cosmic figures -- also exist.
I then wondered if perhaps these entities could exist-for someone, and not someone else.
Clearly I'm missing something. If the experience of interacting with me in a dream is the same as in reality, and I didn't cause your dream experience, then why believe i caused the real experience at all? At the very least it makes my status as cause suspect.
The dream if anything seems to weaken the claim.
It is true that dreams and nightmares tend to be incoherent in most of the cases. They can deceive us, even though they are composed of information stored in our minds based on our experiences. Nonetheless, I personally believe that there are always some exceptions. My dream did not have anything incoherent nor bizarre. It was just about me interacting with you. I understand. You can say that I spent so many hours here, accumulating a lot of data, that it is obvious that you would appear in my dream. Yet, I also read a lot of Greek mythology or fantasy tales, and these characters do not show up in my dreams. My point is that their source of existence is missing in both my knowledge and consciousness. Then, I consider these characters as non-existent. But, since you appeared in my dreams looking very real, I guess your existence is plausible and my dream was more legit than bizarre.
Quoting Joshs
Exactly by following my feelings, I came to the conclusion that you exist. :smile: I know that an image (like a mirror) can prove me wrong or cheat me.
I understand. My arguments seem to be more transcendental than I thought.
Quoting hypericin
You are assuming that dreams are necessarily caused by something or someone. Didn't you ever think that we just dream because our minds simply do so? That our mind deploys such located data like a flower expels pollen?
I attach relevance and importance to the fact that I experienced exactly the same thing both dreaming and awake. For this reason, I may approach a basic notion: you (the person whom I interact with) exist.
Quoting javi2541997
Whats the difference between dreaming about me and being a novelist who writes a story with me as one of the characters? Novelists often say the characters come to life and tell them what they want to do. Do you think a novelist distinguishes between the reality of their dreams and that of their writerly imagination? Does my appearance in your fiction prove my existence?
The second is fiction, while the first is an act of mind remembering (while I am sleeping) people I know and whom I interacted with. Furthermore, a novelist is conscious that what he writes is fiction. The level of realism varies by the type of novel, as some novels can be very realistic; however, most narratives still involve fictional elements. A dream is, in most cases, a reproduction of what we experienced before. They are sometimes bizarre and incoherent, but these are the exception.
Quoting Joshs
This is a very complex question to answer. I have not met a professional writer yet, but I tried writing some short stories to post them here in TPF. So, speaking from my experience, I can tell you that both paths intersect. I remember writing a short story about a summer day with a friend of my childhood whom I have never seen afterwards.
The characters (my friend and me) were, at the same time, both real and fictional. They were real because we exist, and I can prove that without doubt, but they were also fictional because I wrote a short story when we were toddlers, and we are no longer like that. Therefore, I can assume that a past version of myself is fictional. Furthermore, I admit that everything around us is more impressive when we are kids, so I guess my short story had fictional parts, even though I claimed that my work was based on a real-life story...
At least I was able to distinguish that my friend was real and that I put some "imagination" in our childhood memory.
Quoting Joshs
You haven't appeared in my fiction yet. :smile: You only appeared in both my reality (interacting with you right now) and in dreams. And yes, your existence is absolutely proven in these experiences.
Quoting javi2541997
Im confused. Above you say that an act of remembering makes something non-fiction but below you write that remembering the past makes it fiction.
Quoting javi2541997
Even if I agree that strict remembrance of my experienced past is non-fiction, I dont recall ever having a dream that simply recalled a past event. They always tell a new, never before experienced story or adventure. I dont think we are even capable of strict remembrance in a dream. Their style of thinking is not linear.
Pardon. What I tried to explain is that fiction and non-fiction sometimes interfere with each other. My past experiences are not fictional, but if I were a writer, I guess I might use some "fiction" to write a plausible story.
Quoting Joshs
Are you really sure? Imagine for an instance you dream of a friend or family member of your childhood. They randomly appear in your dreams, after years of missing. I guess you could not say that you dreamt of unknown people or that your dream was bizarre. Precisely. Thanks for your memories; you can link those people to the source of your experience. That was what happened to me. I literally dreamt that I was interacting with members of this forum, and the thinking was very "linear". The disappointment came when I woke up and realised that everything was a dream, but look, here we are having a written interaction with each other. It is not very different from the dream I had.
It's impossible to experience anything twice with exactitude. With respect to a person's perceptual habits/expectations much of what is potentially new to a re-experience may be rendered negligible by habitual perception. We tune out most of the information available to us for good reason.
The people you perceive are no more constitutive of what is real than the people you imagine as an artifact of past perception. Though we can ponder this to impractical consequence. We ought to know the use value of determining what constitutes the many kinds of things that could be said to exist, whether abstract or concrete.
We do imagine and produce simulacra of humans at the level of disembodied, abstract, internal, private illusions. We do this here in the forum by language alone, to assist the projection of mixtures, amalgamations, explorations of ideas by reading others representations of their thought.
We are dreaming now, to the extent we participate in a communal dream of shared reality. The brain is blind, subject to the projection of its own representations of the world it has indirect access to. Many minds are projecting upon another, merely abstractions, which necessarily tune out and simplify the horrendously complex empirical world.
The map is not the territory.
The perceived person is not to be confused with the actual/empirical person.
Yet the contrary position also holds:
The map becomes the territory, insofar as it remakes/refies the territory.
The perceived person stands in for the person, even in their absence, as a memory mediated figure. The expectation holds they resemble themselves predictably. Javi resembles Javi enough to affirm: Javi is Javi.
There is a horrendous video of a Korean(?) mother who lost her child, who was enabled by AI to bring back an interactive simulacra of said child. Something inside me recoils against this, yet if the mother could just dream the same scenario, on command, and it was possible to be made public, would I have the same reaction. Probably not.
As a forethought, I will explore and discuss your perspective on why the people in real life differ from the people that appear in my dreams. I think it is plausible that I can experience the same thing twice in both living and dreaming. But I am sleepy, and I can't elaborate on this for now. Until tomorrow! :wink:
First, I ended up with the conclusion that, for the reasons you expressed above, there are differences between yourself here, in reality, and then yourself in my dreams. It seems that the latter is like a hologram or a figure in a mirror that I should not trust in.
I can't agree with that. The fact that my mind may cheat me in my dreams is somehow true, but it is not always the case. As I said in the OP, the dreams were just an exact reproduction of myself interacting with you in TPF. I thought it was very real until I woke up, and I realised that I was dreaming. That it was a dream and now I am in "the real world".
Nonetheless, I tried to think of it more deeply. It is important to begin with the observer: Javi, me.
I understand that the Cogito has always received criticism from many philosophers after Descartes posed this point. Yet I think it was actually a good example. I think in both reality and dreams; therefore, I am. Then, I exist.
Now that we are at this point, it is important to ask ourselves if everything around us exists as well. I don't want to jump in the rabbit hole of whether the external world is mind-created or exists with independence from us.
My point is that I think you exist because in different mental states you caused certain experiences and feelings in me. I think this is more than necessary to prove your existence. I don't care if you're real or a figment of my imagination; your source of existence is clear: experience.
Then if the observer gives as existent the perceived. Why do we need more to prove someone else's existence?
But we don't need and can't use private dream content for the proof of any existence as it stands in contrast with what really confers that proof: the waking life of enduring reality. Though we can equivocate here for the sake charity/fun that dreaming together is constitutive of the possibility of any experience of each other. Paradoxically in this equivocation, dreaming together also requires us to be awake, to share our visions/perspectives as we are doing so here.
Secondarily maybe you are conveying there are certain TPF members who you enjoy exchanges with, time after time, and their appearance in your dream signals a deeper kind of acknowledgement/value of their being/existence.
We could strip Berkeley's dictum "To be is to be perceived" of its metaphysical weight about foundations and consider it as just a dictum about existential/social relevance.
Kafka gets that part. We are the dice in the game.
Care to expand?
Between the man who has long turned to dust and the posthumous reception of his works, where is this being that is Kafka? Kafka is just a memorial reconstitution, the interpolation of his stories/biography, piecemeal ideas searching for context, in the theater of our heads, an arising and falling away. We always want to understand what defies understanding, as if narrowing to a subject with careful reading/analysis we arrive somewhere. Reading Kafka might make us gloomy and nauseous, in which case the Dr. recommends abstinence.
In Kafka's reflections and maxims, there is provided a glimpse of how to proceed in a dark world. Maybe it could be described as a kind of stoic or gnostic vision. Contact with it requires meeting it on its own terms. So, a failure of description is accepted as description.
The stories are sharply different from each other. The one's depicting an account given by a person do not match what is given purely through the third person. It all gives the impression of an epistemology just out of reach.
This is where the problem is. How do you justify this dichotomy of "someone exists objectively" vs. "someone exists at least for me"?