a dogmatic approach to knowledge- and certainty-pronouncements? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Does the prospect of a unknown future refutation make the strongest argument weak — ZzzoneiroCosm
Does the prospect of a unknown future refutation make the strongest argument weak? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Should it at the very least temper a dogmatic approach to knowledge- and certainty-pronouncements? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Addendum: It's wise to beware (moreover) of an uknown future refutation of the possibility of an unknown future refutation. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Is it possible to refute the possibility of an unknown future refutation? — ZzzoneiroCosm
As for example, when someone proposes an argument to us that we cannot refute, we say to him, "Before the founder of the sect to which you belong was born, the argument which you propose in accordance with it had not appeared as a valid argument, but was dormant in nature, so in the same way it is possible that its refutation also exists in nature, but has not yet appeared to us, so that it is not at all necessary for us to agree with an argument that now seems to be strong."
Sextus Empiricus
Does the prospect of a unknown future refutation make the strongest argument weak? Should it at the very least temper a dogmatic approach to knowledge- and certainty-pronouncements — ZzzoneiroCosm
Addendum: It's wise to beware (moreover) of an uknown future refutation of the possibility of an unknown future refutation.
Is it possible to refute the possibility of an unknown future refutation? — ZzzoneiroCosm
The problem of induction and Popper's falsifiability anticipated. I don't know if it works for deductive logic though. The square root of 2 was irrational before the Pythagoreans deduced it and will always be irrational till the end of time itself. — TheMadFool
As for example, when someone proposes an argument to us that we cannot refute, we say to him, "Before the founder of the sect to which you belong was born, the argument which you propose in accordance with it had not appeared as a valid argument, but was dormant in nature, so in the same way it is possible that its refutation also exists in nature, but has not yet appeared to us, so that it is not at all necessary for us to agree with an argument that now seems to be strong."
Sextus Empiricus — ZzzoneiroCosm
Also the word "refutation" says a lot about what Sextus Empericus meant. It implies a premise or premises will turn out to be false but it's unlikely that there will be a problem with validity. This ties in quite neatly with the problem of induction and Popper's falsifiability doesn't it? — TheMadFool
The basic question is: Is logic derived from how the world works or is logic independent and prior to how the world behaves? — TheMadFool
As for my non-orthodox view, on one level, all sound deductive logic will require true premises. The truth of premises will in all cases require some reality that is conformed to. The conformity to the referenced reality will be less than infallible. Hence, all sound deductive reasoning is less than infallible in its conclusions. — javra
logic cannot be used to substantiate the credibility of logic, for so attempting presumes the very conclusion one is attempting to arrive at from the very get go - this irrespective of the specific instantiation of logic used — javra
Hence, all sound deductive reasoning is less than infallible in its conclusions. — javra
Agreed. — TheMadFool
The Pythagoreans originally insisted vehemently that every number could be expressed as a ratio of two integers, and then someone refuted that by showing that some definitely cannot. Is that refutation not set in stone now, as much as the observation of one black swan forever refutes the claim that all swans are white? — Pfhorrest
if one cannot prove that at no future time will anyone find conceivable what to us is currently inconceivable (say some sapient being that will exist a million years from now) then neither can one demonstrate the infallibility of the claim. We find it impossible to conceive of how the square root of 2 is not irrational; can this of itself demonstrate that all intelligences that shall exist for all time yet to come will likewise find it impossible to conceive of some justifiable alternative to this affirmation? If not, then we have not demonstrated that no unknown future refutation is possible. — javra
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