So what's going on here? What is happening? Why can't we stop? — csalisbury
So what's going on here? What is happening? Why can't we stop? — csalisbury
What makes "The snow is white" true is the snow being white. That's not a justification. — Banno
But one of the big appeals - one of the temptations you see thinker after thinker succumbing to - is the possibility of pronouncing the Truth. Of being the one who pronounces. — csalisbury
As usual, the missing words are being white “to us”. Truths are always ultimately psychological facts, not ontic ones, as they require that reality has the further thing of a point of view. — apokrisis
Just for the heck of it, what do you say psychology is? I confess to a bias against much of it, which admittedly should not cause bias against all of it. Except that for the failings of psychology (as I see it, and them), psychologists seem uninterested in putting their own house in order. But on your take on it, I may be able to suspend my "disbelief."So what better example of a psychological truth could be imagined? — apokrisis
How could you possibly be so sure, if it is a work in process? — Banno
The colored in world we see around us isn't how the world is, it's how it looks for conscious creatures with visual systems like ours. — Marchesk
This relation is symmetrical. The world is also the world that appears coloured to such creatures as us. — Akanthinos
False, they're the same shade, which I verified with my color picker: RGB( 126,126,126 ).
The truth in this case is different than what it appears to be to us. — Marchesk
There's a lot of stuff that philosophers do and and a lot of stuff that can be done with philosophy.
But one of the big appeals - one of the temptations you see thinker after thinker succumbing to - is the possibility of pronouncing the Truth. Of being the one who pronounces. — csalisbury
Truth, capital T, gets eviscerated by the postmoderns, but the gesture and drive lives on nontheless in their works. Derrida is emblematic here. More truth-shaking than anyone AND ALSO the most pronouncy person who ever lived.
Capital T truth is pronounced synoptically. Anything else that might be said will, inevitably, fall within the ambit of the truth pronounced - and so can be given its proper place.
Nietzsche already more or less said that but kept doing it anyway.
So what's going on here? What is happening? Why can't we stop?
The question is rhetorical, rhetorical because I do not think it answerable unless "conscious and unconscious phenomena" is restated in some way that makes more sense. — tim wood
I realize there are exceptions, and maybe I'm a half-century out of date, but that's why I asked. — tim wood
Capital T truth is pronounced synoptically. Anything else that might be said will, inevitably, fall within the ambit of the truth pronounced - and so can be given its proper place. — csalisbury
Be that as it may, my response was simply that the right way to go about things is to "pronounce truth" - as that is then inviting falsification head on. It is saying, come have a go. — apokrisis
So "Snow is white" is a statement, and not a state of affairs, but that snow is white is a state of affairs, but not a statement?
This line of thinking is quite confused.
Can we get by without it? I think we can. — Banno
That would make sense in an intuitive way. I’m interpreting it as “the map is not road”. Still, don’t all philosophical narratives intend to expound of that which is real or reality? This taking it for granted that they’re not instances of intentional deception. So, allegorically speaking, if the map is true because it accurately depicts the road, then wouldn’t the map be an expression of Truth? — javra
So psychology - to the degree it is scientific — apokrisis
Maybe you are talking about psychology as therapy or something? — apokrisis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.