Without prejudice, it remains a possibility that science is actually investigating all there is to be investigated. — Pseudonym
scientism is very likely the number one cause of nihilism. — Agustino
>:O >:O >:O >:O - yeah, ridiculous, unfounded propositions, for which there is no empirical evidence like scientism :> Here's an example:And that's a classic example of why people like you hate it so much, just in case it stops you from making ridiculously unfounded propositions like that one by asking that you actually come up with some empirical evidence to back them up before we all nod sagely in agreement. — Pseudonym
Are you laughing too? >:OWithout prejudice, it remains a possibility that science is actually investigating all there is to be investigated. — Pseudonym
“If we take in our hand any volume; of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance; let us ask, Does it contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number? No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence? No. Commit it then to the flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion.”
This does not follow nor does it address the problem raised by Wayfarer.2. All Metaphysical statements are meaningful - In this case the statement "only statements that can be verified with respect to scientific evidence ought to be considered meaningful" must itself be meaningful, being as you point out a metaphysical statement itself.
3. Some metaphysical statements are meaningful, others are not - In this case, it is perfectly reasonable to argue that the metaphysical statement "only statements that can be verified with respect to scientific evidence ought to be considered meaningful" is meaningful and all others are not. — Pseudonym
This statement itself cannot be considered meaningful since it cannot be verified with respect to scientific evidence. — Agustino
So if you accept the statement, it is contradictory. This is known as a performative contradiction in philosophy, and it is a valid ground for dismissing the statement as incoherent. It's not a paradox since it's not an argument or syllogism.Only if you accept the premise within the statement, which you can't do without accepting the statement. — Pseudonym
This is the fallacy of special pleading, and again, is grounds for dismissing a statement.an exception to its own conclusion. — Pseudonym
No, this doesn't follow. If you take statement (1) "Some (or even all) metaphysical statements are meaningful", you will not find it begging the question UNLESS you use it as a premise in an argument looking to derive the same conclusion as (1). But if you use it as a premise for any other purpose, it is not begging the question.You would also have understood point (4) much better, which you have conveniently ignored, that if metaphysical statements about metaphysics are to be analysed by their own conclusions then every such statement becomes meaningless. The statement "metaphysical statements are meaningful" is also meaningless by this standard because it begs the question (you have to already believe metaphysical statements are meaningful in order to believe the conclusion). — Pseudonym
I don't see how this is the right approach at all. You do not accept self-contradictory axioms, and instead you pick reasonable axioms that have a prior probability of being true (that aren't self-contradictory in other words) and don't commit other logical fallacies, and go from there.So we either allow a kind of suggestive metaphysical proposition, even though we might have to suspend some analytical principles temporarily in order to explore the implications, or we must dismiss entirely our ability to say anything about metaphysics as all such statements would themselves be metaphysical and cannot be assessed until we have judged the value of metaphysical statements. — Pseudonym
But if you use it as a premise for any other purpose, it is not begging the question. — Agustino
Sure, except that special pleading points to a double standard. Why does the statement of the positivists make an exception to the general rule? And if you answer with the statement itself, then you'll beg the question in your larger argument.Exactly, but by the same token you can use statements containing special pleading as premises, because the justification does not have to be contained within the statement if it is a premise to further analysis. — Pseudonym
No I'm not - you're trying to do that by saying that it is an exception to itself, which is meant to be the general rule. I'm trying to judge it by what it purports is the general rule.You're repeatedly judging the single metaphysical statement of positivists by different standards to its exact opposite statement. — Pseudonym
Why does the statement of the positivists make an exception to the general rule? — Agustino
Since you're returning to a question of utility, (2) ultimately reduces to (1).but it highlights the utility of allowing cases of special pleading as premises. — Pseudonym
It seems to me that at first you start out by telling me that metaphysical statements are not matters of fact, but rather much like "guides" for action and behaviour, similar to ethics. So then you're telling me that one ought to act according to whatever metaphysical (or non-factual) statements.1. Michael Friedman's primarily utilitarian approach which essentially argues that as a performative statement it can be at least falsified, as can its opposite. Consider that no statements of metaphysics can be verified. In that case, all statements in performative truth become statements of oughts. One "ought" to act as if X were the case (where X is the metaphysical statement in question). Having done this transformation, however, metaphysical statements become verifiable by their utility. The statement then becomes "there is no utility in...". This can be falsified easily by demonstrating some utility to non-verifiable metaphysical statements other than this one. If this one is the only statement that has any verifiable utility, then it justifies its own exception, by its own rule.
You may of course disagree with the assessment of utility, but that is not a metaphysical argument, but an empirical one. Utility can be demonstrated. — Pseudonym
It has occurred because we share the same underlying metaphysical presuppositions with regards to these matters. How come we do? That's largely a matter of practice and habit, that we have learned and been taught, and also because the metaphysical statements describe actual structures of reality and of our experience. So there's the practical level (we learn by having to live in communities, that words are used as such and such), there's the theoretical level (that this reflects the actual structure of reality), and then there's the pragmatic level (namely that because this reflects underlying reality, remarkably similar metaphysical positions are taught across cultures and communities that are otherwise remarkably different).We may not be certain what "utility" exactly refers to, but we seem nonetheless to be able to use the word in normal conversation and still understand each other. How has this miraculous confluence occurred? — Pseudonym
Yes. Not all aspects of existence can be verified, and that doesn't mean they don't exist. All that it means is that they are first-principles, and almost by definition, first-principles cannot be deduced from something more general than themselves.Are you suggesting that the meaning of the word "utility" is an open metaphysical question, whose answer cannot in any way be verified, but to which nonetheless, the entire human population that has ever lived has reached a remarkably similar answer? — Pseudonym
It has occurred because we share the same underlying metaphysical presuppositions with regards to these matters. How come we do? That's largely a matter of practice and habit, that we have learned and been taught, and also because the metaphysical statements describe actual structures of reality and of our experience. — Agustino
first-principles cannot be deduced from something more general than themselves. — Agustino
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