Well certainly I thought I was, but I wouldn't include scientific or historical questions under Philosophy, and you would. So you must be defining these things in a different way to me. — PossibleAaran
We make some progress here, but I'm sure you know that "metaphysics" and "epistemology" are again technical terms which philosophers use in different ways. So I will have to ask again what you mean by these two words, exactly? — PossibleAaran
My question to you is the same as I ask NKBJ: what do you mean by "Philosophy"? — PossibleAaran
You can't philosophize about the content of empirical sciences. The philosopher doesn't tell you that Caesar crossed the Rubicon or that the earth is round. Those are not subjects of Philosophy. The philosopher might enquire by what methods these things can cogently be established and examine assumptions made in the course of establishing these things, but the historian and the scientist tell you that Caesar crossed the Rubicon and that the earth is round, not the Philosopher. — PossibleAaran
Isn't appealing to feelings or emotions a logical fallacy? — Harry Hindu
In America, the game is called "Clue." — YuZhonglu
And it is an argument, as can be seen here, that Christians will see as supporting their morally bankrupt religion. — Banno
Christianity is far from morally bankrupt. I am a part of the Salvation Army, and these people are completely sincere as well as ethical. — Ilya B Shambat
I am with you there. — Merkwurdichliebe
I am opposed with you there. — Merkwurdichliebe
This uncertainty is then like a third coin toss... And so on. We end up, as Wittgenstein does in 'On Certainty' with a bedrock of propositions which we simply do not doubt, not ones we cannot talk about doubting, just ones we do not, in practice, doubt.
We cannot, in practice, act as if things exist with properties such as being impossible to detect, even in theory. Properties such as manifest influence on spacetime without being located in spacetime. In practice, "God doesn't exist", or "God probably doesn't exist" are both perfectly rational statements to make because it is impossible to even proceed with thought, let alone life, without simply assuming some hinge propositions to be sound.
I think each person may even have different hinge propositions, but that's another discussion. The point is, the coin tossing has to stop somewhere. — Isaac
I'm willing [to] consider your points... — Merkwurdichliebe
Now can we get back on topic, I was digging what StreetlightX had to say. — Merkwurdichliebe
Wriggle away, man; you're dead wrong about my following 'mob-thinking" in ethics. You simply don't have a clue what I was getting at. In fact I don't think you have a clue what you are getting at either; you just like the sound of your own voice. — Janus
I am with you there. — Merkwurdichliebe
That's hilarious coming from someone who declares that they eschew the thinking of the mob; which ordinary language obviously reflects. — Janus
Where is your argument for such a claim, how and why will lame-ass ordinary language philosophy prevail? it's been around about a century now and it has settled nothing. — Merkwurdichliebe
But that is how it works. Or at least, in any real life scientific context where objectivity is said of expriments and their results. It's only here, among 'philosophers', where I am 'attempting to dictate language'. But consider that you've been using language wrong, from the very beginning. — StreetlightX
This sounds like you too. — Merkwurdichliebe
Right, so 'the existence of Jupiter' is not the kind of thing that can be qualified as objective - or not. You're projecting a grammar mistake onto the thing itself. — StreetlightX
And as for ‘subjective' - frankly, nobody knows what ‘subjective’ means. — StreetlightX
Yawn. Objective just means reproducible under fixed conditions. Nothing more. The blather about mind and feelings and independence and perception and reality and truth and so on is just noise.
The sooner people realize objective and subjective do not form an antithetical pair, the better. — StreetlightX
So it seems you are using subjective here to mean something different. What? — Banno
What exactly has that got to do with whether the universe has ever existed? — Devans99
How about trying a more “down-to-earth” definition of what is true and what is false. For example: Any system of human thinking, doing, and governance which promotes and enhances the physical, biological, and mental health of the human race is true; those which do not are false.
Hopefully, this will get us away from focusing exclusively on overly abstract semantical arguments and dry propositional analyses. — charles ferraro
but we're off topic from the OP — christian2017
I'm content with that, afterall, I love pussy — Merkwurdichliebe
And hello. — Merkwurdichliebe
How am I supposed to know that you weren't following the conversation? I quoted the bit I just re-quoted above, and that's what I was responding to. Then Frank responded to my comment about it. — Terrapin Station
To argue that it means something per what? — Terrapin Station
It is very frustrating that people are not even engaging with my arguments. — Devans99
It seems simple to me, the universe can't have existed forever (it would have no start so none of it would exist) — Devans99
You're right. — YuZhonglu
You're paranoid as well as defensive and abusive; nice combination! — Janus
My belief is that gods do not exist. If we are of the same mind regarding this then when you say you also do not believe any gods exist then you are expressing the same belief as I am. — Fooloso4
All examples of tautological, logical or empirical judgements. They are not really judgements at all but facts. So you haven't answered the question; I asked for an example of a philosophical or aesthetic judgement which could be intersubjectively corroborated by incontrovertible evidence. That the epistemological status of philosophical and aesthetic judgements are comparable to that of moral or ethical judgements and not to that of empirical or logical facts was the point. — Janus
it may seem obvious to you that there are unconfirmed hypothetical facts, and there indeed may be, but as I said earlier they will only become actual facts when confirmed. The idea of a fact which could never be confirmed in principle is incoherent. So, facts and confirmation are inextricably tied. — Janus
What is the "proper" understanding? — Terrapin Station