I wonder if you have closely read any one or more of the following of Witty's writings:
• Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
• Philosophical Investigations
• On Certainty
• Culture and Value
• Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics
Many of your questions and criticisms of Witty seem derivative of secondary and tertiary mis/readings of (fragments from) the works listed here. — 180 Proof
That's the problem with Krauss' theory of a "Universe From Nothing". His so-called "nothing" paradigm omits the metaphysical Bible-God, but retains such metaphysical "non-things" as Space-Time & Natural Laws & Quantum Fields. — Gnomon
For science, the nonphysical = nonexistence.
— TheMadFool
This premise is false. Physics deals with force and energy as well as matter, and these are non-physical, yet assumed by physicists to exist. Your statement would pertain truly to the "life sciences", though, but only if taken in isolation (meaning, I'm sure that Biologists and Chemists believe that force and energy exist, even though considerations thereof do not generally pertain to their work). — Michael Zwingli
You don't need a justification in order to conclude that you have a headache. it is not the end product of a process of ratiocination.
As if you could justify to us your claim to have a headache by producing for us your pain - as if the pain were not itself the headache.
The objection here is not that you do not have a pain - that, for you, is certain. It's that "I know I am in pain" is like "I know I have an iPhone". — Banno
He is not looking at language itself — Antony Nickles
Don't mistake the finger pointing at the moon for the moon. — Some Guy
No. From personal experience. I have connections. :cool: — Caldwell
Well yes — Antony Nickles
So you've had a play with Wittgesntein's thinking here. What would he make of this, do you think?
Truth is about propositions; but perhaps there are two games, one mundane, in being "of this world", the other profound to the point of incomprehensibility.
What do you think now? — Banno
To the extent my pain goes away with the same medication, my pain is the same as your pain (as it were, essentially--a grammatical claim on the sense of "sameness" as it relates to sensations). They are the same pain but in two separate bodies (as color can be the same on two separate objects)--this is the fundamental fact that makes expression and acceptance the grammar of sensations. — Antony Nickles
Is it all a 'wild goose chase'? Is it all a mixture of 'bad philosophy', and running round in circles literally, or on various threads about 'truth', the existence of God etc? There are many threads tackling the same issues, and they keep going on, which shows how tricky some of the areas of thought are. — Jack Cummins
Probably not. But still it should have its own "way". — dimosthenis9
everything there "works" in such harmony — dimosthenis9
virtue is expensive and painful.
— unenlightened
Why do you think that is?
— TheMadFool
If virtue was fun and profitable, every arsehole would be virtuous — unenlightened
Bad philosophy. Religious apologetics. "New Age" perennialists. Etcetera — 180 Proof
virtue is expensive and painful. — unenlightened
Well, "the truth" is imaginary, thereby a denial (E.Becker) or distraction from (L. Feuerbach) the real: ineluctable ephemerality ... oblivion. Philosophy reminds us to 'make life significant' because of, not despite, the real (e.g. daoija, (early) buddhism, ... epicureanism, spinozism, absurdism). — 180 Proof
Agree, but this doesn't answer martyrdom question. — SpaceDweller
Does it make sense to be willingly tortured in the name of morality?
Even after knowing the "secret knowledge". — SpaceDweller
I don't think so, and this tells me there really is no secret knowledge or morality alone thereof that would be worth it. — SpaceDweller
Here is the deal. I present to you a red car.
The question: Why is this car red?
Answer that and I'll tell you why Z is not actual. — khaled
Yes. But it was anathematized presumably, not because un-scriptural, but because It allowed direct contact with God, and bypassed the Church as mediator & translator. Later, the Protestants likewise claimed the right to know the written word of God in vernacular language. And at the same time, gave license to empirical scientists to consult the creation of God directly, Again, making an end run around the Holy Mother Church, with its ancient authorized scriptures, and again violently resisted. From then on, Catholic Mystics (closet Gnostics) tried to fly under-the-radar of the Inquisition, so they could have it both ways : direct divine visions and church sacraments — Gnomon
given 1) ~w
given 2) ∀(~w) ∃(r): r => ~w
assume r, therefore ~w
Not a giant step for logic.
Please give predicates for "actual," "possible," "necessary." No predicates, no precision; no precision, no proof — tim wood
Not necessarily. There could be some true statements we can't prove (incompleteness) — khaled
Witt would say, is that I do not "know" pain; I have it. — Antony Nickles
Why not first disambiguate between formal and less formal construals of key terms such as ‘negative claim’ and ‘proof’? There are obviously many proofs which substantiate negative claims — Cartesian trigger-puppets
What's the problem? — Banno
1. World X is possible & World X is not actual (you would agree)
2. World X is impossible & World X is not actual (obvious)
I give you world Z which is not actual. That is to say,
3. World Z is not actual.
Question for you: Is world Z impossible or is world Z possible?
How would you be able to tell? — TheMadFool