So since the general readership can't immediately separate in my texts what is an opinion of mine, and what is a stated, supported fact, I shall now promise to state "this is an opinion of mine" or something similar when I state such. — god must be atheist
I noticed that often when I appeal to common sense, people will want some background reference, or statistical or other evidence to support an opinion. — god must be atheist
Thanks, Possibility. This is what I had always thought, until a demand came to two separate posts of mine, to name where the author stated what was my opinion. So if you and I agree on this, many others are not on the same page; therefore I take your encouragement to say that the text of a post of mine was written as my own opinion.When you write in reference to other authors, unless you offer a direct quote, you are interpreting what they say based on your subjective opinions about what their words mean to you. — Possibility
I would say there is, but this is not a thread to discuss that notion in detail. If you like, I can open a thread with the post "is common sense some insight or thought or opinion commonly accepted?"What you determine to be ‘common sense’ arguments are still based on your own subjective experiences - which you cannot assume to be commonly agreed upon, unfortunately. There is no such thing as ‘common sense’. — Possibility
Thanks, Possibility. This is what I had always thought, until a demand came to two separate posts of mine, to name where the author stated what was my opinion. So if you and I agree on this, many others are not on the same page; therefore I take your encouragement to say that the text of a post of mine was written as my own opinion. — god must be atheist
I would say there is, but this is not a thread to discuss that notion in detail. If you like, I can open a thread with the post "is common sense some insight or thought or opinion commonly accepted?" — god must be atheist
How would one go about telling these people that they are asking for something that is not available or not necessary? — god must be atheist
Why the ongoing badgering, then? How does one stop such badgering, which included egging-on insults, like "you haven't shown anything", "your reasoning is faulty", etc, when these are empty accusations without merit? — god must be atheist
but why does one need to defend against false criticism? — god must be atheist
I do think reasoned opinions should flow quite naturally from source texts though, and be demonstrable on demand. — Pantagruel
I noticed that often when I appeal to common sense, people will want some background reference, or statistical or other evidence to support an opinion. — god must be atheist
I also noticed that when I make an opinion, and state it as a claim, on the works of some classic philosopher, then people will ask me "where did he state that / can you quote an exact page number and book where he said that, so I can look it up, etc. — god must be atheist
Case in point I talked about Wittgenstein on July 20 and 21, 2019 — god must be atheist
At this point I don't know if this demanding nature of other users of the forum is genuine, and they really need me to back up my opinion with quotes, statistics and other hard evidence, or else they are using this tool as a tactic to discredit my opinions. — god must be atheist
... I'll ask them to please forego the demand for evidence, and accept my argument on the strength of my reasoning. — god must be atheist
In my opinion Witty lacked the insight of accepting the status quo of language.
I noticed that often when I appeal to common sense, people will want some background reference, or statistical or other evidence to support an opinion. — god must be atheist
I have to assert here that these demands by other users strike me as odd. If I make an opinion, why do I need to cite statistical evidence, or by a quotation from a by me critiqued classic thinker, once I show my opinion reasonable by either logic, or by applying common sense. These demands are baffling for me, and perhaps the reason they come is the way I present my stances: maybe my opinions come across as stated facts. — god must be atheist
Some people are badgers, and that's just what they do. I've seen this kind of repeated response quite a few times over the years in various threads--"you didn't explain anything", "you still haven't answered my question", "you haven't shown anything", etc. The badgers quite often have no more insight into the issue at hand than they accuse their targets of having.
Sometimes you just have to move on, and ignore some people. — Bitter Crank
Some, many, most? discussions on the forum are built from poorly presented facts, undefined or poorly defined terms, and unsubstantiated claims. I don't mean this as a reference to you. Expecting people to clearly state their positions and the basis for them is not unreasonable. It's at the heart of what philosophy is. As for common sense - it's just one of those phrases like "a priori" or "self-evident" that are most accurately translated as "seems to me." — T Clark
I think common sense does see that vaccines help stave off illness. It may not have been common sense opinion in the nineteenth century, but it was in the second half of the twentieth century. The new trend, the Vaxxers, is too weak to call their opinion common sense.Common sense is that we should not inject harmful substances into the body, but that does not tell us whether the substances in vaccines are harmful or whether the benefits outweigh the risks. — Fooloso4
The strength of your reasoning is directly tied to the evidence on which it is based. Or, if your claim is that in any particular case or in all cases there is no need for evidence then you must be able to explain why evidence is not needed. — Fooloso4
I cannot speak for everyone but there are some of us here who do not think that is is being demanding but rather is just standard practice in philosophical discussion that makes reference to philosophers or deals with matters of fact. — Fooloso4
In my opinion Witty [...] was a genius who stopped his thinking at a premature insight, whereas he ought to have proceeded further in his thinking.
"A conclusion is a place where you stop when you got tired of thinking." -- traditional, origin unknown. — god must be atheist
I also noticed that when I make an opinion, and state it as a claim, on the works of some classic philosopher, then people will ask me "where did he state that / can you quote an exact page number and book where he said that, so I can look it up, etc. — god must be atheist
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