ryan
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Of course this is valid, the way you put it.
Of course it is valid, but is it sound? If not, the conclusion can be rejected.
If you think the premises are sound, then you have to accept the conclusion as logically following from the premises. Something DBT doesn't seem to understand.
Then why ask about it's validity. You really want to see if we accept the premises.
But I would argue P1. If the mind is (in a restricted sense) a group of neurons, then you are just giving the group of neurons a new name.
No. "Is" here obviously has ontological force. It's not just a name. If it is the case that my conscious mind is the state of a group of neurons inside my brain, then that's it. It's ontologically the case that I am the state of a group of neurons. I think, therefore I am but the state of a group of neurons.
And you're not really "arguing" anything much if that doesn't make the premise false.
EB
I am trying to understand and address the massive elephant in the room like DBT was. Are you simply using the terms "group of neurons" and "mind" to name the same thing? If not, then, like I think DBT was getting at, you are trying to smuggle the mind in with a group of neurons.
Traditionally, the mind and a group of neurons are not the same thing. Or else there wouldn't be thousands of years of contention about this.
So my issue about P1 is that you are trying to define the mind as something that it really isn't supposed to be defined as (whether you believe the mind exists or not).