Even so the guy who solved Fermat’s theorem wasn’t exactly happy about solving it because it left him bereft of purpose. — I like sushi
Kind of like saying, "my definition of 'dogma'" is correct.
— Pantagruel
Not really. I’m simply saying the other person is misusing the term to suit his purpose — I like sushi
You didnt answer the question sir. What are some things that you have this kind of account for? — DingoJones
3. If we want to know how the mind works, we have to make a mental image of the mind. But to make a mental image of the mind, we need a storage capacity that equals the mental image, and then some more storage capacity to manipulate the thoughts that explain the mind. Therefore to explain the mind, we need a larger, better, more intelligent thing than our mind. Which is not achievable because you can't have something bigger than itself. — god must be atheist
"To some extent" leaves a huge margin of error, or a small margin of error, or no margin of error, or an unknown margin of error.yet we know to some extent how it works — creativesoul
When I said "to know our minds" I meant no margin of error — god must be atheist
Are you claiming to have achieved this standard with your own philosophy then?
Your philosophy is all this:
“One that is rendered in evolutionarily amenable terms. One built upon universal criterion. One built upon knowledge of all thought and belief.
One without exception. One that is capable of taking account of that which exists in it's entirety prior to our awareness. One that is capable of taking account of that which is prior to our language. One that is capable of setting out a coherent account of all thought and belief.” — DingoJones
Well, that's demanding perfection and/or omniscience. — creativesoul
Well if all you mean to say that all knowledge must be true... — creativesoul
pretty much that whole quote is full of lofty, impractical requirements for whats “proper”. — DingoJones
Totally. l had a discussion a few weeks ago, where the other person wouldn't acknowledge that scientific statements are not a priori. — Wittgenstein
l had a discussion a few weeks ago, where the other person wouldn't acknowledge that scientific statements are not a priori. — Wittgenstein
My friend didn't only regard foundational topics as such but statements like " Gravity causes objects to fall towards earth" to also fall under a priori statement. — Wittgenstein
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