what do you mean by useful? — karl stone
As a pragmatic epistemologist I assert that the primary value of truth and knowledge is for use in decision making to help identify, plan, and implement needed human action. — T Clark
As a pragmatist, isn't it more prgamatic to defend reasonable assumption against unreasonable scepticism — karl stone
One thing I haven't discussed is how the information we incorporate into the conceptual model is evaluated, justified. Justification comes in the steps where we evaluate the SCM. We need to answer these questions:
— T Clark
Observation and deduction are elements of pragmatism. — universeness
So, would a phrase such as 'the philosophy of instinct/intuition' be an incorrect phrase? — universeness
I don't know what this means. — T Clark
As a pragmatist, I assert that no philosophical position is meaningful unless it has concrete implications for phenomena present in the everyday world, life, and experience of normal human beings.
— T Clark
Do you have scientific evidence for this assertion? — Cornwell1
Why you don't understand this? I have read this (interesting!) thread ab initio.
You asserted "that no philosophical position is meaningful unless it has concrete implications for phenomena present in the everyday world, life". Is that why you don't understand the meaning? — Cornwell1
There was no philosophy of any kind involved. What's your point?
— T Clark — universeness
I don't know what this means — T Clark
'If the child is standing near the coffee table then stand near the child in case they fall, perhaps this is a toddler learning to walk.' Before the instinctive act, no-one present at the time had reasoned that the child might fall against the table, the instinctive act saved the child from injury. — universeness
Catching a child before its head smashes against a coffee table is instinctive.
It was an action and it saved the child, which is good, and there was no pragmatism involved.
— universeness
There was no philosophy of any kind involved. What's your point?
— T Clark
So, would a phrase such as 'the philosophy of instinct/intuition' be an incorrect phrase? — universeness
This thread is about knowledge as seen from a pragmatic perspective. It's about knowledge, not behavior. — T Clark
It's not that a philosophy of instinct or intuition doesn't exist, I'm sure it does. It's that it wasn't involved in the actions taken to protect the child. No philosophy was. Why would there be? I don't get it. — T Clark
I assert that the primary value of truth and knowledge is for use in decision making to help identify, plan, and implement needed human action. — T Clark
I shouldn't say this, but I will - all philosophies are based on fairy tales. Now go away and come back when you know a little more about metaphysics. Try "An Essay on Metaphysics" by RG Collingwood — T Clark
If all philosophies are based on fairytales then does that not make 'Pragmatic Epistemology' based on a fairytale. — universeness
In one stream, you posit that pragmatic epistemology is not just a valid strategy for dealing with the experience of living a human life. You are suggesting, it seems to me, that it is the best strategy for living a good human life, as an individual, and it is also the best method of assisting other humans in their lives. I disagree and I propose that mere pragmatism is an insufficient epistemology to achieve such goals. — universeness
Perhaps you can just decide to improve your level of politeness when debating others. — universeness
but my main point is that information by itself is not useful until we put it in a context of a particular problem. — pfirefry
No. It's the path I've taken. I find it's useful. I present it here. Pragmatism is a metaphysical position. It's not true or false, it's just more or less useful in a particular situation. Which is a very pragmatic definition of metaphysics. You disagree? I have no problem with that.
As for pragmatic epistemology being a strategy, it's not, at least not as I've laid it out here. It's a philosophy, a way of seeing reality, the whole shebang. Ontology, epistemology, yadda yadda yadda. It has all the bells and whistles of any other philosophy — T Clark
Be careful, his big brother might decide you are a snotty little twerp and decide to slap you down a lot harder. All vendetta starts this way. Turn it off and that way, it does not grow. — universeness
I think I explained this relatively poorly, but my main point is that information by itself is not useful until we put it in a context of a particular problem. This speaks to the pragmatic approach to knowledge described in the OP. — pfirefry
I think strong emotion is more likely to lead you to making the wrong decision about what to do than clear thinking. — T Clark
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