The thesis claims that every scientific hypothesis requires a belief in a set of assumptions. — Curious Layman
Inductive, associative, habitual, holistic. On this more inclusive view of reason, a finite web doesn't need a clear starting point. Morality, science etc. are large going concerns with unclear sources. — bongo fury
It seems your definition of foundationalism only applies to the physical world. For instance, do you set up an explicit chain of inference when making a moral decision? — Curious Layman
The question still remains, why do you set up an explicit chain of inference? Can you epistemically justify doing it? — Curious Layman
Why you don't do it when building your opinion about the world? — Curious Layman
In other words, can you justify one without referring to and criticizing the other? — Curious Layman
The explicit chain of inference is justification. — T Clark
My opinion, what I called a model, of the world comes from the sum total of my experience. — T Clark
Moral decisions, in my experience, are not rational, although I guess they could be. A rational argument starts with assumptions. — T Clark
Are there any parallels between the scientific method and coherentism? — Curious Layman
No need really for me. Either is a fine choice. I will counter your question with another question.
Can you justify both without criticizing either. I think both should be embraced. In which proportions is another matter — Paul S
As to your question. Exactly. I don't think that you need either to be able to work out any concrete problem. I — Manuel
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