It seems to me that facts are independent of argument. Science will make arguments mathematical or otherwise but the truth is only established if the external world or other evidence supports the argument.
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Something can be true but unobserved or unobservable. — Andrew4Handel
Science will make arguments mathematical or otherwise but the truth is only established if the external world or other evidence supports the argument. — Andrew4Handel
Do arguments matter? — Andrew4Handel
Science will make arguments mathematical or otherwise but the truth is only established if the external world — Andrew4Handel
Once we decided arguments had limited scope we would rely less on them. — Andrew4Handel
And how do you come to that decision? You convince yourself through argument. Am I wrong? — Madfool
Not really. Hypotheses are more like suggestions or speculations. Arguments are more a case of claiming what follows. Arguments rely on the truth of the premises. — Andrew4Handel
For example, I don't think that claims about climate change - however valid - can legitimately lead to the claim that we ought to prevent climate change. — Andrew4Handel
If we want to go from provisional facts about reality to action, then it seems that we need to cross the "is-ought" barrier. Do facts imply anything about how we ought to act? — Andrew4Handel
So, in a way, you can have the survival of the fittest desire or ideology, and yet the restraints will be the restraints of nature's possibilities. Society utilised massive slavery for centuries and flourished, but that ideology was defeated (at an appallingly late stage). Arguments against slavery made little impact for centuries. So we could end up with any type of weird dystopian society that nature allows regardless of counter argument. — Andrew4Handel
So evidence seems much stronger than argument. However, absence of evidence doesn't equate to absence. Something can be true but unobserved or unobservable. — Andrew4Handel
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