Is there a distinction between doubting the proposition that a sentence expresses, and doubting what proposition that sentence expresses? It seems to me that there is, but that is a distinction that threatens to be collapsing under your defence of KILPOD.
...There might be cases where it really is not clear even to experts whether the x should be classed as an ant or a termite, and there one might think that it is actually the meaning of the terms that is is being brought into question as well, but that is a very specific kind of case.
If I point to a thing and label it an elephant I do not need to know what an elephant is besides the one thing I pointed to.
First of all, you have again shifted the subject of discussion from "an elephant" to elephants. This again is asking for essence. I do not need to /say/ what the difference between two objects is, it is enough for them to be distinguishable. To subsume particular objects under some concept of "type" is not necessarily a valid starting point. And yet this seems to be what you are always trying to do here.
But admitting that is not the same thing as admitting the possibility of doubt concerning the proposition that it actually does express. It is merely to allow the possibility that words used to express that proposition may have meant things other than they actually do. That is not doubt, that is just accepting alternative linguistic possibilities.
In any case, if you are attempting to lay down a necessary or sufficient or necessary and sufficient condition for what counts as knowable, you are not being very Wittgensteinian...
No. The ability to differentiate the two is an obvious indicator of their difference. If you have A=A say "but in this case A was a B" this leads to B=B. It is still the same. Even if I (obligingly) wrote A=B with "B not=A" this would only prove that such a thing cannot be, logically.
I'm only concerned about the cogito ergo sum argument. Is it a sound argument or not?
And how do you justify the proposition that things are not simply what is meant? I can just say "that" is definitely not "this". Just look at the letters THAT THIS. You see the difference, right? What is different cannot be the same. It requires changing the subject from the concrete thing in question to it's essence to doubt this. But why would I want to change subjects?
Do you think the earth is orbiting the sun?The earth orbiting the sun is a fact, what we think is happening is a fiction.
But how, knowing what "no ant is an elephant" means, is it possible to doubt it? Sure, I may not know the meaning of "ant" and/or I may not know the meaning of "elephant" but then I simply do not understand the proposition that no ant is an elephant...
Well yes, the logical possibility of doubt exists here, because to know that no ant is an elephant it's necessary to know what an ant is and what an elephant is. These are cognitive achievements. If it's (logically) possible to doubt what an ant is or to doubt what an elephant is, then it's (logically) possible to doubt that no ant is an elephant. Descartes would certainly have said that this sort of proposition can be doubted, which is why the Cogito arrives at the proposition that it does. But for Wittgenstein, "No ant is an elephant" would count as knowledge, because the possibility of doubting it is logically possible. Ants and elephants are things to be discovered in the world.What about a proposition such as "No ant is an elephant"? Is there a way of doubting this?
Absolutely not. His big mistake is to think that a foundation of indubitable certainty is required for knowledge. The kind of indubitable certainty he finds in the privacy of his own mind rules out the possibility of discovery, which is a necessary condition for knowledge. What Descartes takes to be knowledge is nothing of the sort, precisely because it rules out the logical possibility of doubt.Is Descartes position justified or not?
Medical research can be funded by the state. Can wealthy-powerful pharmaceutical companies be trusted to serve the public interest when, for example, they deliberately try to get people addicted to opiate pain killers? Furthermore. medicine in and of itself is not happiness and fulfilment.I think they're several clear examples where money does bring happiness and fulfilment. Like medicine.
Not necessarily. The idea that the Earth orbits the Sun is true, so it's not a fiction. An idea, belief, proposition, is a product of the mind, but if such a product of the mind is true to the facts, then it isn't a fiction.An idea is a fiction.
What you've given is a hypothetical imperative, which proves all moral imperatives are not categorical,
A maxim is I suppose a limited sort of principle, in that it is a determination to always do a particular thing under particular circumstances; but it applies only to oneself. It becomes a proper principle when it's universalized as applying to all rational beings. For Kant there is only one fundamental principle which defines the moral condition and determines the moral value of action, and that is the categorical imperative.Which contains a maxim, which is itself a principle.
It's always possible that I didn't express what I meant clearly enough, but I think you objected to something I didn't actually say. Any chance you could remind me of exactly what it was I said, verbatim, that you objected to?That's not what you said. If you had, I wouldn't have objected.
Sorry but this seems terribly confused.In addition, we don't think in terms of principles, that is pure a priori legislations, when we consider our actions, which indicates it is not necessarily principles that lead us to bad judgements. Rather, we look to the benefit we may or may not receive from the action, which leads back to the fallacious proposition that Kantian deontology respects right/wrong, when in truth it respects only good/moral, not good/immoral.
I disagree. A principle can be posited as a necessary ground (for moral action), and it remains a principle even if that principle is judged not to be a necessary ground (for moral action). The judgement in this case concerns whether the posited principle is any good. It does not defeat the fact that it's a principle.A principle of necessity has already been posited as such..To then judge whether or not it is a ground, defeats the fact it is a principle.
I take you to mean: "iff he can show the condition is possible without it".this is not a necessary principle for this condition, iff he can show the condition is impossible without it.
Actually it's predicated on one fundamental principle - the categorical imperative.Kantian deontology is predicated on fundamental principles
That's just a dogmatic assertion. I take the view that moral principles often lead to bad judgements and at best should be treated as rules of thumb. A morally sensitive agent doesn't need them....as is any decent moral philosophy
There's a lot of misunderstanding going on here. To judge a principle of necessity would simply be to judge whether it is in fact a principle of necessity. I'm certainly not saying that a Kantian moral judgement judges the categorical imperative. Of course it doesn't. It judges an action according to its compatibility with the moral law (categorical imperative). Lying, for example, is (according to Kant) rationally incompatible with the categorical imperative. The categorical imperative is the criterion for judging the moral value of actions; so judging what one's duty is, is just a question of that - judging what action it is my duty to perform or avoid, in the light of the categorical imperative.One cannot judge a principle of necessity.
By elucidating what science is, to what extent its procedures are rational and how it's methods achieve knowledge, in contrast to other "methods" of trying to acquire knowledge (e.g. divine inspiration or the "authority" of religious texts, or Trump style evidence-free subjective conviction).How does philosophy today lead us to science?
This is a confusion of three separate questions concerning three different areas of philosophy: ontology, epistemology and ethics. The question of your existence is answered by you asking it. If you didn't exist you couldn't ask the question. But the brute fact of your existence is independent of the question of knowledge. When you're asleep you cannot be said to know that you exist; you're oblivious to the fact that you exist. Others may observe you while you sleep and thereby know of your existence. But even if no one knew of your existence, including yourself, that would not mean you didn't exist. No one knew that Pluto existed until it was discovered in 1930. Does that mean Pluto didn't exist until 1930? Of course not. The very concept of discovery presupposes the possible existence of things before they are known, and even of things that may never be known. So it is a mistake to think that you do not exist for those who will never know of your existence, since existence is independent of anyone's knowledge. Existence is not 'for' anyone or anything. As for whether or not you 'matter', that is an ethical question. Even if no one else knows of your existence, your existence would still presumably 'matter' to you? This is a question of value, not of epistemology or ontology.I do not exist for those who will never know of my existence. If nobody knows of my existence, do I exist?, or do I matter? … Do I exist if I'm the only one who knows of my existence?
So you join a philosophy forum to test your ideas. Great, that makes sense. That means listening to other people - it's other people's criticisms, valid or not, that are the test for your ideas. But you say the virtue of your idea is that you don't have to listen to other people. That makes your idea immune from criticism. So by what means are you going to test your idea?To test my ideas? I don't mind who it's coming from. But it's not like an authority figure that tells you to do things and doesn't give an explanation why, or is open to debate. I make my own decisions.
Then why join a philosophy forum?But the key here is you don't have to listen to other people either...I'm happiest this way, because I make my own decisions and if it doesn't work out, the only person to blame is me...
Why would I be interested in what's "true for me"? How can I even make sense of that? The Donald Trump definition of truth: What is true is whatever works for me.I guess I think the most human thing you can do is to stick to what's true for you, what works for you.