↪ovdtogt You know that I was arguing in support of position that a belief has a different existential status than a mere claim, right? — Pantagruel
Yes. If one believes they themselves exist, they would then believe in the illogical. Because, consciousness is, in itself, illogical (how consciousness/subconsciousness functions together). Not to mention all the other metaphysical phenomena... .
So the statement : Cogito Ergo Sum (I think therefore I am), is in that sense illogical and/or an existential absurdity/tautology. — 3017amen
Why would anyone believe something they know to be absurd, illogical or irrational? Do you? — ovdtogt
Yes. If one believes they themselves exist, they would then believe in the illogical. — 3017amen
This makes no sense to me at all. Why is consciousness illogical? — Pantagruel
So you go around telling everyone, you don't exist. When someone you greets you, you say: "Hey man, you don't exist and I don't exist." — ovdtogt
Because it breaks the laws of non-contradiction — 3017amen
Okay gotcha. Let's start with this.
Driving while daydreaming, and sleepwalking thus:
Jack is driving and not driving= true or false statement?
Jack is sleeping and not sleeping= true or false statement?
Please, you may re-word the phenomenon anyway you like to make it logical. — 3017amen
Daydreaming does not equal not driving. — Pantagruel
..when would it be ok to believe in a some thing that, is considered absurd, illogical, irrational, etc.. anytime, sometime, never?
— 3017amen
Why would anyone believe something they know to be absurd, illogical or irrational? Do you? — ovdtogt
You could 'claim' you had seen these things only if you had indeed really (imagined) to have seen these things — ovdtogt
Nah, you're just wrong about my position... — creativesoul
This makes no sense to me. Truth cannot be false. Belief can. Thus, belief can be falsifiable. Truth cannot. — creativesoul
A claim need not be believed in order to be exist.
— creativesoul
But this was my point. There is a world of difference between a belief upon which you would stake your life, and one that you just cook up. — Pantagruel
The one you cook up really doesn't qualify as a belief at all, it is just an arbitrary statement.
Nah, you're just wrong about my position...
— creativesoul
And could you explain me why is so? — Gus Lamarch
"What can be said can and should always be said more and more simply and clearly"
~Karl Popper — Pantagruel
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