But verificationism holds that p is true if and only if it has been verified.
And it follows that everything that is true has been verified. — Banno
all verified propositions have been verified — Michael
But if you claim that all that is true is what has been verified, you are obligated to say that all that is true has been verified. — Banno
That is, your answer is simply to deny that verifications has anything to do with truth.
No, it's to deny the realist's claim that "true" and "verified" mean different things. — Michael
Say my wife is having an affair with someone, and then I catch them at it. I have verified that she is having an affair. It seems fine to say that prior to my having verified it it was not verified, but it seems absurd to say that prior to my having verified it, it was not true that she was having an affair. — Janus
If you want to consider anti-realism then your hypothetical scenario is "I caught my wife having an affair and then saw evidence that this had been going on for a long time." Perfectly coherent scenario. — Michael
Sure, and, as I said, it's a stance that is counterproductive for success in the world. People who think "it's all in their head" tend to end up in institutions with white padded cells. — baker
Objective idealism is a perfectly sound and sane philosophical outlook, even though it is a minority view. — Wayfarer
Pretty much. — Banno
The world is not what we experience, it is what is the case. — Banno
Typical non-answer. — 180 Proof
That should be read, obviously, as "In my opinion there can be no final solution to the problem of suffering". So, as I have said, if Buddha says there can be a final solution to suffering then I disagree with him. If you agree with what you have imputed to Buddha and think there can be a final solution to the problem of suffering, a solution that would completely end all suffering for all time, a solution other than the total extinction of the world (which could not be effected anyway), then what do you think that solution could be? — Janus
/.../ How, then, could the Buddha not have believed in reincarnation, and how can one accept reincarnation to be true without believing in the incorporeal self, aka "the soul"? — Michael Zwingli
The aim or purpose of looking for such a formulation being what?
— baker
Understanding. — Banno
Ooops, that hit a nerve.That is an extremely vulgar remark. This is a philosophy forum, it might do you some good to read some more about the subject before launching ad hominems. Objective idealism is a perfectly sound and sane philosophical outlook, even though it is a minority view. — Wayfarer
Sure, you can massage the terms to make them synonymous, but what have you really achieved by doing that other than establishing an eccentric usage of terms? — Janus
The history of science shows that it may be rational to be wrong, yet not irrational to be right. In a letter to Mersenne, Descartes raised the question whether ‘a stone thrown from a sling, the bullet from a musket or the arrow from an arbalist have greater speed and force in the midst of their flight than in the beginning’, suggesting that this is indeed the ’vulgar belief’ but adding that he had reasons for thinking differently. Clearly, in 1630 the vulgar belief was rational. In the case of a man or a carriage, nobody would contest that the greatest speed is achieved some time after the beginning of the movement, and there was every reason to conceive of the movement of a projectile in the same way. It took the genius of Descartes to reconceptualize movement as a state rather than as a process. One should not say, however, that the belief at which Descartes arrived by his astounding mental leap was irrational, since his theory, as it were, enabled one to perceive the evidence that supported it. The vulgar theory was rational in view of the facts known to it, that of Descartes by virtue of the novel facts it enabled him to establish. I am making the banal point that the relation between belief and observation is a two-way one, rather than the one-directional inductive process suggested by such phrases as ‘the most rational belief given the available evidence’.
From Jon Elster, Sour Grapes: Studies in the Subversion of Rationality
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.