The problem has always been the assumption of a foundation instead of lateral corroboration. It's like doing a puzzle, but taking all the pieces apart to put a new one in. We don't really confirm things against everything that's come before in a linear process. — Cheshire
Yeah, as I mentioned, I recall reading somewhere where he says truth in natural language was "meaningless," — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, STT is originally/intended to be deflationary I guess, which jives with how it is often used. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Well, if we follow the evidence it suggest that self-reference isn't a reliable source of truth, in the sense the system breaks down per Russell and Godel — Cheshire
I kind of thought of Tarski's paper, that I still struggle with reading, was basically a correspondence theory of truth? — Moliere
Either way, what I'm hoping to convey is that logical theories like Russell's are attempting to accommodate any metaphysics of truth -- else it would be begging the question on truth. — Moliere
Which means it's methodological - it's about attitude. Closed or open. — Banno
Monism, and authoritarianism, offer certainty. — Banno
No, burying them is not immoral per se. This doesn’t violate any of their rights which are applicable to dead people. — Bob Ross
You said that dead people have no rights; therefore, your position necessitates that it is not impermissible, in principle, to do those horrific things. That was my point. — Bob Ross
Also, I will say that, to your point, your example exemplifies a rare occurrence in abortion-situations in the West (if we were to map it over) because in your example the women are doing it solely for the benefit of the child—so it is a complete sense of respect for them (even though I think what they are doing is immoral). — Bob Ross
Where it gets controversial, is what rights (if any) a brain dead human being has (and, likewise, a completely dead human being has). — Bob Ross
There's a considerable ambiguity in natural language terms and concepts, which gives them a kind of cohesion through fuzzy boundaries, which can then be interpreted as a coherent unity, — fdrake
I don't exactly object to classical logic, though -- I'm saying it has limitations, not that it's wrong in every case. — Moliere
That you value those cells over the person who must carry them is heinous. — Banno
A tale. One of the pre- socratics - I forget which - "proved" that air becomes colder under pressure by blowing on his figure. The breath feels cold. And we all know that a wind is cold. Hence, he disproved that gases under pressure increases in temperature. Do we take this as a refutation of thermodynamics? — Banno
Does the fact that it doesn't make sense to speak about something "moving greenly," "economic recessions being pink," or "plants being prime," only have to do with the rules of competent language use and not with what those things actually are? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Sure, that was just an example on the relevance of content to meaningful predication. But Russell's paradox is about stipulated sign systems, "languages," no? — Count Timothy von Icarus
What would be an example of a paradox in nature? — Count Timothy von Icarus
For example, we can say "red" or "angry" of the number "4," in ways that are entirely correct vis-á-vis form. Yet obviously such talk is nonsensical because if one considers the content of: "the number four is angry and red," it is clear that the subject is not of the sort that it can possibly possess these predicates (obviously, this implies we are speaking of the number, not some drawing of 4 in a children's book, which might indeed be angry and red). — Count Timothy von Icarus
In essence, material logic is more concerned with the actual content and how it corresponds to reality, whereas formal logic deals with abstract structures and patterns of reasoning
If you do this, you just have the study of completely arbitrary systems, and there are infinitely many such systems and no way to vet which are worth investigating. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Especially because the liar's sentence gives justification to P2 in the original argument: No principle holds in complete generality. — Moliere
I don't think future potential is all that relevant. — Michael
Forcing a mother to carry to term and birth a child because the 1 day old zygote in her womb is a living organism with human DNA just ain't right. — Michael
The issue here seems to lie in predication, and so it's more obvious that there has to be a metaphysical side to the investigation — Count Timothy von Icarus
If we follow the peripatetic axiom that "nothing is in the intellect that was not first in the senses," my question is "where are the paradoxes in the senses or out in the world?" — Count Timothy von Icarus
I have never experienced anything both be and not be without qualification, only stipulated sign systems that declare that "if something is true it is false," and stuff of that sort. — Count Timothy von Icarus
