These philosophers were unique in the West in consciously not developing belief about nonevident matters, pro or con. Such beliefs, they maintained, being about things nonevident, could not be substantiated, and so remained unstable and open to challenge from competing beliefs.... Beliefs about things nonevident therefore were to be avoided, they recommended, and their philosophy addressed how this was to be achieved" (1). — tim wood
Nonevident matters bad; evident matters good, apparently. — tim wood
there is no reason to assume that appearances have to be explained; instead they themselves can become the principles of explanation. This is the 'Copernican revolution' — tim wood
Appearances are just the involuntary objects of consciousness, objects "not as abstract concepts, such as substances, forms, matter, etc., but rather as distinct pathai, like the sight of a tree, the taste of a lemon, or the dread that follows rejection" (75). — tim wood
On the evident, (from Against the Logicians, Sextus): there are four distinct classes of objects [pragmata, or facts]... 1) things manifestly evident, 2) things absolutely nonevident, 3) things naturally nonevident, and 4) things temporarily nonevident.
1) Things manifest are just the appearances themselves, sensations and thoughts
2) Things absolutely nonevident are "the things never to be presented to human apprehension"
3) Naturally nonevident things are those incapable of clear presentation to perception. "The soul, for instance, is one of the things naturally nonevident; for such is its nature that it never presents itself to our clear perception"
4) Temporarily nonevident are just those things but for circumstance are not manifestly evident, like the books in the library when you're in the kitchen (93-94). — tim wood
"Appearances constitute a reality;.. they resist, under the questioning of Pyrrhonists,.. resolution into any other reality.... Indeed, appearance appears as its own reality, provided we accept it just as the peculiar reality that it is.... But if we seek to explain appearance as a function of some... synthesis, or anything else, then it becomes... a secondary function of more basic factors, of other criteria, which are themselves beyond appearances as such, and so necessarily nonevident" (75). — tim wood
Pyrrhonism is not skepticism. Skeptics doubt. Pyrrhonists believe. — tim wood
My impression is that trust itself would not be part of any question. That is, if you appeared to be trustworthy, then you're trustworthy. And no doubt "appearance" more than just visual impression. The pencil in the glass of water and the dancing trees suggestively instructive of how they tried to think.If I don't trust my enemies, how much trust do I have in my friends? — TheMadFool
My impression is that trust itself would not be part of any question. — tim wood
Appearance. (Try reading the OP again; the substance of it is from the book referenced.)What then helps you decide whether to believe a given claim or not? — TheMadFool
What helped them decide? it's not clear to me they either needed help or made a decision. Do you decide to believe the floor is under your feet when yo swing them out of bed in the morning?What then helps you decide whether to believe a given claim or not? — TheMadFool
Appearance. (Try reading the OP again; the substance of it is from the book referenced.) — tim wood
What helped them decide? it's not clear to me they either needed help or made a decision. Do you decide to believe the floor is under your feet when yo swing them out of bed in the morning? — tim wood
Then you're neither Pyrrhonist nor skeptic. And yours seems a question lacking sense. Can you put any of its feet somewhere on the ground?We're going round in circles. I question the claim that there are evident things. — TheMadFool
Then you're neither Pyrrhonist nor skeptic. And yours seems a question lacking sense. Can you put any of its feet somewhere on the ground? — tim wood
Spending too much time on Internet forums, probably — Wayfarer
The author makes the point that echos of Pyrrhonism are heard in Berkeley, Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and others. — tim wood
Well, channeling Pyrrho, I'd say the evident is what it is. Not to be doubted because there is nothing to doubt. And, being undoubtable, it - the evident - is indubitably real. As candidate for doubt, that leaves yourself, but that being evident too is also indubitable.All I'm saying is I doubt the reality of the evident. — TheMadFool
I read Pyrrhonists (and apparently Buddhists) as avoiding that pitfall. Do you think we might call it considered/informed indifference? — tim wood
As for Buddhism: No, but a case of withholding final judgment until the conditions for it are met. Or, holding tenets tentatively, provisionally.
It's why in Eastern philosophies, realization is so important: with it, the distinction between holding a tenet tentatively/provisionally, and knowing something to be a fact (ie. realization) is made clear. — baker
And one could hope in all endeavors, except those requiring a shoot-first ask-later response. — tim wood
Perhaps you're taking the notion of skepticism too far, so far that it begins to appear nonsensical. There's a kind of specious armchair skepticism which says that everything is debatable, but it cuts the ground out from under its own feet. There are things that can't be doubted - the painfulness of pain would be a good start. Attach a strong paper-clip to your earlobe, and then debate the point — Wayfarer
Pains occupy a distinct and vital place in the philosophy of mind for several reasons. One is that pains seem to collapse the appearance/reality distinction. If an object appears to you to be red it might not be so in reality, but if you seem to yourself to be in pain you must be so: there can be no case here of seeming at all. — Wikipedia (Private Language Argument - Ludwig Wittgenstein)
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