That's about what we do do, not what we ought do.
What ought we do? — Banno
That particular conceit of the philosopher, "you cannot say anything about Covid-19 if you do not first have an implicit or explicit criterion of what truth iis" — Banno
How can you say there is a dog if you don't have a criterion to decide what is a true dog from a false dog? — David Mo
The substitution axiom is a mathematical axiom. I would like to know what it has to do with the existence of objects outside the mind and the possible knowledge of them. — David Mo
What kind of objectivity are you talking about? You seem to believe that even if humanity, the planet, the galaxy and the known universe disappeared, the Sicilian Defence would still exist. Is that so? In what kind of reality?
So your words are about human minds, yet you say that the words are about some arbitrary persuasion. I don't see how they can be about both. Either it is about human minds from a view from no/every-where, or about your arbitrary persuasion (your view of human minds).Yes, it’s a paraphrased conclusion having to do with human minds in general, given from certain pertinent tenets of a particular epistemological theory. It says here what minds are; what they do is elsewhere. And no, it isn’t a need, indicating some particularly beneficial inclination; it’s an interest, indicating merely some arbitrary persuasion. — Mww
It looks as if we mostly agree here, but I have to ask: How do you know that you are thinking of an unextended body or a straight line connecting two points if those concepts don't take some shape, some form, in your mind? How do you know that you are being rational or irrational if rationality and irrationality don't take some form in the mind? To assert your rationality, you must have some reason to assert your state of rationality.The false dichotomy is long-since reconciled, again, theoretically, and under all objectively real conditions, they are necessarily inseparable. Nevertheless, the human cognitive system is fully capable of pure thought, of which nothing empirical is cognizable because the conceptions are self-contradictory (an unextended body), or, that of which empirical cognition is possible but iff we can construct objects corresponding to the conceptions (a straight line connecting two points). To say nothing of moral dispositions, for which the actions are necessarily empirical, but the causality for them is given from pure thought alone. — Mww
Yet, "doubt" is used to refer to a feeling of uncertainty....here's something of Wittgenstein's On Certainty: doubt has a background of knowing. One can doubt that it is raining, but only if one understands what it would be like for it to be raining. One can doubt that Sydney is the capital of Australia, only if one knows what Australia is and what a capital is...
(yes, I know it's Canberra...)
Doubt has a background of knowing; hence it is absurd to attempt to doubt everything. Indeed, it is absurd to attempt to doubt most things.
Hence the philosophical enterprise of nihilism undermines itself. — Banno
Yes, it’s a paraphrased conclusion having to do with human minds in general, given from certain pertinent tenets of a particular epistemological theory. (...) And no, it isn’t a need, indicating some particularly beneficial inclination; it’s an interest, indicating merely some arbitrary persuasion.
— Mww
So your words are about human minds, yet you say that the words are about some arbitrary persuasion. I don't see how they can be about both. — Harry Hindu
How do you know that you are thinking of an uextended body or a straight line connecting two points if those concepts don't take some shape, some form, in your mind? — Harry Hindu
How do you know that you are being rational or irrational if rationality and irrationality don't take some form in the mind? — Harry Hindu
To assert your rationality, you must have some reason to assert your state of rationality. — Harry Hindu
Charity says interpret to maximize agreement. That wouldn't explain why you think we mostly agree on everything.Charity. — Banno
Make a list of all your beliefs, from your presidential preferences down to the size of your shoe.
How many of those would we agree on? — Banno
But this is just tautology, — Isaac
We don’t use truth as a mark of existence of real objects, for they are necessarily presupposed by the cognition of them. It is, after all, impossible to cognize any real object that doesn’t exist. — Mww
What they are an experience of, and thereby what they are known as, depends solely on the logical form of truth intrinsic to human thought. — Mww
Yes, perception is a simple criterion. It's more or less useful in everyday life. But it is useless in propositions about electrons or force fields. This is where the problem of true propositions begins.
If you have thought that defining truth is simple, you are wrong. — David Mo
That's basically what I mean by "objective." If you want to argue that everything is mind-dependent and ultimately dependent on some type of universal mind that grounds all existence that's fine with me and your view is credible to me. — BitconnectCarlos
But I wasn't talking about using perceptions to define 'truth'. I was talking about using perception to distinguish 'true dog' from 'false dog'. There is no general case which covers 'true x' and 'false x'. — Isaac
All methods of obtaining truth refer to propositions based on intersubjectivity, experience and prediction. That goes for your dog and for an electron. This is what we mean with "Give me a proof of this". — David Mo
Then comes the discussion about whether the truths thus obtained are objective or not. — David Mo
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