I think it is more likely that theism is the source, not the result, of excessive optimism. To gain that optimism, in the face of the pessimism that might attend the realization of inevitable suffering, loss, injustice and annihilation, some people are drawn to the idea of a transcendent reality. I believe the same impulse is there in the case of Hinduism and Buddhism and most other religions too. — Janus
The people you are talking about probably care about their eternal life and well-being. You don't care about that because you don't believe in it. — Janus
I'm talking about scenarios where you have a belief system like "A" plus "A implies B", and then a new belief that "not-B". That is straightforwardly just a logical contradiction, and you have to change something about it on pain of inconsistency. At this point we're not even talking about observational evidence, just pure abstract logic. Whatever your reasons for believing that A, that A implies B, and that not-B, something somewhere in some of those reasons must be wrong, because you just can't have all of those at once. — Pfhorrest
The new belief that ~B itself requires justification - that is, underdetermination suggests that there is never sufficient reason to accept that ~B. — Banno
You could reject not-B, on the grounds that A and that A implies B, and then make all of the subsequent changes to the rest of your beliefs that are required to not demand you accept not-B. — Pfhorrest
This is non-black cat — Banno
So falsificationism doesn't work — Banno
It only narrows down the possible sets of beliefs that are still viable. — Pfhorrest
There's no algorithm for deciding what to believe. If you agree with that, in the face of what you have said here, then we have no disagreement. — Banno
I'm at a loss to see what your view is. You appeared to set up a thread in defence of falsificationism. You then accepted that falsificationism does not provide a path to belief. — Banno
But it doesn't do this, either; as pointed out. — Banno
Bayesian analysis works better. — Banno
Instead of starting with a blank slate of no possibilities and trying to build something up from that tabula rasa, you start out with every possibility live, and then for every argument or bit of evidence you encounter, every relationship between certain ideas you find, you whittle down some possibilities — Pfhorrest
There's no algorithm for deciding what to believe. If you agree with that, in the face of what you have said here, then we have no disagreement. — Banno
How is the existence of a reason to rule it out not also a belief? All you have here is competing beliefs - the belief in A and the belief in a reason to rule out A. — Isaac
Can you give an example, real or imagined, but not schematic? — Srap Tasmaner
There's no algorithm for deciding what to believe. If you agree with that, in the face of what you have said here, then we have no disagreement. — Banno
That's basically what I meant. It's wishful thinking. It would be terrible if X therefore it's not X. How could it be not X? Come up with something, then believe that, because it would be too terrible if that weren't the case and so X were the case instead.
That's basically straight from the mouth of my devote mother when pressed on the issue. God must exist because it would be just awful if he didn't. — Pfhorrest
So when does the actual whittling down happen? As far as I can tell, knowing that you're entitled to eliminate something or many somethings from an effectively unbounded set but not knowing which something -- that might be necessary but it's not the same as actually whittling down. — Srap Tasmaner
Like a car coming at you, you’ve just got to get out of the way somehow, it doesn’t matter which way. — Pfhorrest
Whichever changes seem best fit to make to you, go ahead and make those. — Pfhorrest
Either you don't really mean "best", and satisficing is fine — Srap Tasmaner
To recap: your theory isn't falsification a la Popper but Quine's web of beliefs — Srap Tasmaner
and the way you select what to disconfirm when your web becomes inconsistent is -- as yet unclear. — Srap Tasmaner
Can you give an example, real or imagined, but not schematic? — Srap Tasmaner
Say you think that doing a certain dance (A) causes it (if A then B) to rain (B). You do that dance, or at least you try to do it right, but it doesn’t seem to rain, at least not when and where you expected the dance would cause it to.
You must either conclude that it did in fact rain in a way consistent with your rain dance theory even though it does not seem like it did to you, and rearrange whatever beliefs are necessary to accommodate that conclusion;
or else conclude that dancing does not cause it to rain, and rearrange whatever beliefs are necessary to accommodate that conclusion;
or else conclude that you did not do the correct dance to cause it to rain, and rearrange whatever beliefs are necessary to accommodate that conclusion. — Pfhorrest
philosophical problems like the subject of this thread just look different if you start from a modern science-aware world-view. — Srap Tasmaner
You can't have all three together? Is that what you're getting at, that we must choose one and so we've narrowed it from three to one because all three together were contradictory? — Isaac
Who doesn't think like this already? Or are you simply describing normal mental activity? — Isaac
it seemed like you and Banno were questioning that, implying that there is no way of sorting beliefs at all, them all just being held non-rationally and so immune to any rational process of comparison. — Pfhorrest
Lack of proof is just nothing, the starting point — Pfhorrest
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.