AshvinP wrote: ↑Thu Apr 01, 2021 3:34 pm
OK, so to be clear, you are once again rejecting mumorphism. Because the latter does not posit formlessness (being-awareness-thinking) is causally or ontologically prior to form (thoughts) or vice versa.
Yes, if that is what muomorphism poses, I am rejecting it. I do agree that the
ability of the OP to express forms (including meanings) is ontically fundamental and ontologically prior to forms, but do not agree that
specific forms that emerge and disappear as an expression of such ability
(including the ideas that the though-forms carry as their qualia) are ontologically fundaments. The specific forms (including specific ideas) are causally emergent from the fundamental aspects of the OP.
What differentiates idealism from materialism is that ideas are ontically fundamental, and ideas indivisibly include awareness-thinking-thoughts.
No, that's not what all variants of idealism pose. You formulation of idealism in where ideas are ontically fundamental is exactly Platonist version of idealism. There are non-Platonist versions of idealism (with which I tend to adhere) which do not pose that ideas are ontically fundamental. My understanding is that BK's idealism is also non-Platonic, but if you do not agree, we can ask him this question to clarify in the BK's Q&A thread.
I still don't get the bolded statement. An infant evolving into adult or a person who falls into a coma surely undergo a change in ability of awareness, right? Or if we say the ability of awareness always remains the same but the degree of awareness changes, then surely the same applies to thinking as well.
Again, we are talking about different kinds of awareness. You are referring to a self-awareness (which definitely changes over time, and that is exactly why in Buddhism the "self" is considered to be an emergent form but it is not ontically fundamental), I'm referring to awareness as conscious experiencing (of anything). We had multiple threads of discussions with materialists regarding whether the conscious experiencing disappears in coma, anesthesia etc or not. The primal position of idealism (at least non-Platonic one) is that the conscious experiencing is continuous and unchangeable. If it would appear or disappear, that would make it and emergent property, but idealism poses that conscious experiencing is non-emergent but fundamental (see Chalmers arguments against strong emergence of conscious experiencing:
"Chalmers argues that consciousness is a fundamental property ontologically autonomous of any known (or even possible) physical properties,[14]" ).
Strong and Weak Emergence