Continuing with the same error is not a defense of it. — Kenosha Kid
I find no significance at all in it. I don't think that there is an agent behind anything so it makes no difference at all to me. — Sir2u
But as you are the one claiming that evolution cannot be responsible I would presume that you have an answer — Sir2u
"We cannot believe what our senses tell us about the world because it is not presented to us by an agent.
If we accepted that there is an agent that is purposely sending the information then we can believe it." — Sir2u
Define perception. — Sir2u
Maybe explain what awareness means as well. Does this mean purely conscious thought or does this include subconscious thought too? — ep3265
1. Evolution, the process itself, isn't unguided. It's guided by natural selection. — ep3265
You analyze the conscious mind and conclude it can't come with its a priori thoughts straight from matter. — Gregory
1. If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not give us an awareness of anything — Bartricks
The if, then form of your first premise contains a conclusion within the premise without giving the reasons for the conclusion. — Mark Nyquist
Here is my argument for the truth of the first premise — Bartricks
It seems to me that what's preventing you from acquiring knowledge in this sort of case is that you have acquired a true belief from an 'apparent' representation, not a real one. — Bartricks
If unguided - by which I mean, unguided by any agency - natural forces produced those shapes in the sky, then it was not imparting information to you. It was just pure fluke that, to you, the clouds appeared to be trying to tell you something. — Bartricks
Just a few interesting notes regarding this profound and beautiful argument.Then I refute the idea that reliability has anything to do with whether something is representing or not. — Bartricks
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