I tend to be of the opinion that Ethical Egoism results in an aporia of human relations where trust is rendered as an impossibility. — thewonder
It has a location--a lot of them, actually because that's what space is. — Terrapin Station
It's a good practical one. I use that conclusion all the time in interactions with others and it leads to expectations being met. This is of course fallible and depends on many factors - like how well I know them, how much time we had to communicate, how often do we seem to take the same ideas in the same ways as far as expected behavior and further communication - but I can even tweak things given my knowledge of others and myself and the context. IOW I have a sense of how close our senses of something will be or not. And sometimes....I think you'd need to argue for this. It's not a scientific conclusion. — frank
in the ways I experience the results....they can be as similar as, say, two copies of a music CD. — Terrapin Station
But the truly sad thing is that even if these phenomena are real, they are merely assuming that it would go against current science. It could simply be forces, phenomena, realms, whatever, that haven't been detectable, so far, by scientific measuring, and which do not contradict what we know about other phenomema they have been able to track.Indeed, if they don't see how it could be integrated to their models then they find it more convenient to assume that the anomalous phenomena are hallucinations or delusions of those who experienced them, or to assume that eventually these phenomena will be explained in some mundane way that doesn't challenge their fundamental assumptions. People who spend their whole career working within a set of assumptions don't want to see these assumptions challenged, because their career depends on them, so they will fight to defend them no matter the evidence. — leo
Monday morning quarterbacking. With time and distance and additional information things look a lot different than they did then. — Fooloso4
As I mentioned in an earlier post, the term 'fake news' originally referred to the deliberate manufacturing of false information, but quickly came to mean any information that is claimed to be false. — Fooloso4
They, meaning every news outlet that reported on what what the White House claimed, were not complicit in the manufacturing of lies, but yes, when, for example, the television networks carried Colin Powell's U.N. speech live, they played an unwitting role in spreading those lies. — Fooloso4
If those who maintain the consensus refuse to challenge their fundamental assumptions, outside ideas do not get through to them. Evidence that the model doesn't fit some observations is seen as a sign that there are some variables to tweak in the model, or that those who made these observations are crazy or hallucinated, but not as a sign that the model needs to be fundamentally changed. In the end it is not some outside truth that determines the consensus, it is people. — leo
Of course I wouldn't, in absolute terms. So I'm reduced to guesswork, as we humans so often are. There has never been even the smallest piece of scientifically-acceptable evidence that God has detectable/measurable existence in the space-time universe that science describes so well. So I reluctantly guess that this will continue to be the case. What alternative is there? — Pattern-chaser
I think he’s an atheist troll. — Wayfarer
Don't leap regarding me. I am against war and I know the NYT is effectively pro-aggression whenever it suits the neo-cons. I can't remember why I originally said that, but I would guess I meant that it is not just conservative newspapers who are involved. It is all mainstream ones. And yes, they are really pushing the demonization of Russia/Putin, implicitly intervention in Syria on the ground. I haven't read them regarding Iran but it would surprise me if they go along. Chomsky wrapped this up long ago for me.Ah. Good point. They are liberal on social issues. On matters of war, they take the establishment line. That's the whole point. The NYT helped Bush lie the country into war. Sure they're social liberals. Their support for the Iraq war and their suppressing the story about Bush's illegal domestic surveillance until after the 2004 election gives the lie to the claim that they are any kind of peacemongers.
And today? They are leading the charge toward a war with Russia. The NYT is not for peace. Nor are most liberals anymore. It's been a long time since Vietnam.
What's left of the anti-war movement, anyway? Me and Tulsi, that's about it. — fishfry
In any case, unlike genuine fake news (!), the NYT at least publishes corrections, listens to criticism, and tries to correct the record. — Wayfarer
By your logic every news outlet that covered what George W. Bush claimed, what Dick Cheney claimed, what Colin Powell claimed, what Condoleezza Rice claimed, what Donald Rumsfeld claimed, and what others in the government, military, and intelligence claimed about weapons of mass destruction are complicit as purveyors of Fake News. — Fooloso4
Gnostics are dualists, seeing ‘this fallen world’ as a trap, and all matter evil and a source of misery, the only escape from which is gained by asceticism and denial of the world. Nothing about traditional gnosticism was 'human-centred' - in fact that's the main reason they lost the battle with orthodoxy. Although I suspect that this is one of those conversations where facts don't matter, so I'll butt out. — Wayfarer
I hope that means you can't find the original post or the one it was replying to..... Here we go....I can't see it. — Banno
It's even more basic than that. Colour is a real phenomenon by any account and not a merely "mental" phenomenon.
— Janus
That's debatable and a minority position called color realism. Wavelengths of light and reflective surfaces are real. Whether either of those could be said to be colored in the way we experience color is controversial.
Compare this to feeling hot or cold, which relates to the amount of energy the particles in a volume of space has. Our experience of the energy can result in feeling cold or hot, but the space doesn't feel that way. Similarly, our experience of color relates to visible light reflecting off surfaces of objects.
Even granting color realism, it certainly wouldn't apply to all of our conscious sensations. Kicking a rock and feeling pain is a perceiver dependent experience, not a property of the rock
That's debatable and a minority position called color realism. Wavelengths of light and reflective surfaces are real. Whether either of those could be said to be colored in the way we experience color is controversial.
— Marchesk
Nothing is quite like we experience it. All vision shows things from an angle based on where our eyes are, rather than, say, from all directions at once. Everything is filtered, selected, interpreted. This would mean that nothing that we refer to is real. Since, it seems, actual qualities of the objects of perception lead to our seeing of specific colors, it seems to me there must be some color realism. It would be wrong to think that if there were no experiencers than the empty earth would have trees that look green - to no one, I guess - but it is not a random trait or aspect. Qualities of the things lead to our experiences. Which is the best we can hope for and would constitute a kind of realism, since no perfect realism is possible. Or I suppose I would put it that it's not binary, with perfect realism vs. some non-realism. There are degrees. — coben
I added in the bolded this time to make it clearer.Nothing is quite like we experience it. All vision shows things from an angle based on where our eyes are, rather than, say, from all directions at once. Everything is filtered, selected, interpreted. This[if we followed you logic] would mean that nothing that we refer to is real.
Nothing is quite like we experience it. All vision shows things from an angle based on where our eyes are, rather than, say, from all directions at once. Everything is filtered, selected, interpreted. This would mean that nothing that we refer to is real.
— Coben
That inference is just invalid.
Everything is always, already interpreted...
Every thing.
Hence, there are things. — Banno
Loves takes two as one cannot have true love alone.
Regards
DL — Gnostic Christian Bishop
And not rational.
— Coben
That was what your reply was, yes. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
That's not true. We look and check for ourselves to see if the cup is on the table, and we do not look at the justification.
There is no god's eye view needed. — creativesoul
You are responding as if I am saying you cannot be confident that there is a cup on the table when you see what you decide is a cup on the table.That's not true. We look and check for ourselves to see if the cup is on the table, and we do not look at the justification. — creativesoul
Once the model implicit in the question is on the table, one would be swimming uphill starting to respond. Once, say the subject object split is assumed, for example. The subject here, controlling the existence of things out there.What I was hoping to accomplish was you offering why we'd think that the existence of anything hinges on us. (And that should have been pretty obvious.) — Terrapin Station
Sure. But my point is the usefulness of jtb. Is it a smart way to decide what is knowledge, given that we can only determine something like extremely good justification. Why not just leave it at that? What is the act of adding on the adjective true, knowing that we may, as a species, realize later it isn't. We can still call the conclusions knowledge. And, in fact, I think this is how scientific epistemology works.OK, but the point for me is not that we can know, with any absolute certainty, that our beliefs are true in any absolute sense; but rather to unpack the logic that is inherent in the ways we think and speak about truth. So, past false beliefs may have seemed at the time to be justified true beliefs, but if they were indeed false, then they were false then, just as they are false now. — Janus
So, we can know, within suitably circumscribed contexts, whether a belief is true or false. For example it certainly seems vanishingly unlikely that the justified belief that the Earth is roughly spherical will ever turn out to be false — Janus
I think it's also worth considering that the pragmatist (Peircean) conception of truth which is something like "What the community of inquirers will come to believe when there is no longer any reasonable doubt" is also perfectly compatible with the JTB model. — Janus
Yes, I'm saying it's beyond science, but not that this is a failing of science. God is not detectably present here in the world (I mean detectable by any form of scientific measurement), and this will not change unless God does. — Pattern-chaser
And he will never grasp math without intuition. And the great mathematicians allow criteria like elegance lead them to examine certain lines. I am using faith to mean processes that are non-rational.I think you are misusing the word faith.
If a student is poor in math and has not begun a logic trail in his mind that recognizes how 2 + 2 = 4, throw as much faith at him that you like, but he will never grasp math without logic and reason which are anathema to faith — Gnostic Christian Bishop
That's what he, one individual thought, at one time. Much of the rest of the time he presented reasoned arguments. But in any case, it's not much evidence of anything.Martin Luther.
“Faith must trample under foot all reason, sense, and understanding.”
“Reason is a whore, the greatest enemy that faith has.” — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Seriously?
That would be stalking, not sharing love with another. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I am saying that love is a kind of faith, especially in the beginnig when you have nto spent a lot of time with the other. And actually I think love is underneath works, deeds and reciprocity. Parents' love for children, even romantic love. Yes, of course those are good parts of a relationship, but the love is underneath and causal. And not rational.If you share love through faith, then it cannot be a true love as true love must have works, deeds and reciprocity. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
You are talking about faith based on facts and a logic trail. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I don't think this is right; there may be justified false beliefs, as in the example of the cardboard cutout sheep in a paddock I referred to a couple of posts ago. From where it is viewed it is indistinguishable from a real sheep, so I have no reason to believe it is not a real sheep, at least on immediate viewing. Say I am going by at high speed and only catch a glimpse of the cutout for a couple of moments, then I will not have time to notice that it is not moving; something which, if noticed, would be good reason to doubt it is a real sheep.
Another example: the ancient's belief that the Earth is flat could be counted as a justified false belief. There would be countless examples of justified false belief. — Janus
We have no idea how close we are, knowledge wise, to all that can be known and what can be done. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Actually we can have somewhat justified beliefs about things we do not know. It is not binary, even in science. There are degrees of evidence and models that we use that imply things that we have not yet demonstrated, and then individuals can know things that they cannot prove to others, and more.Speculative nonsense is all we can have of what we do not know, especially of the supernatural. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I hadn't heard of that. A proposition is an abstract object, though. It has no location. — frank
Yes, I am trying to come at it from a number of angles because it is tricky to get people out of a bird's eye view - where they know which are the very well justified beliefs that are true and which are not - to an in situ one where we don't known which one's are merely very well justified and will be overturned.You're all over the place — creativesoul
That actually supports my argument.There's one basic disagreement between us that is worth discussing here, because it's what piqued my interest regarding what you wrote. You claim that the truth criterion is redundant when regarding JTB. You further state and imply that there's nothing more about the "true" aspect of JTB than what we have regarding the justification aspect.
I'm saying - flat out - you are mistaken.
The ground for my saying that is that justification is inadequate for truth. If the aspect of being true were redundant regarding JTB, then there could be no such thing as justified false belief. — creativesoul
I'm interested if anyone else arrived at this conclusion or whether it makes sense. — Wallows
So pick one. NYT stories on Saddam's WMDs that drove the country into a disastrous war that we're still stuck in: Fake News or not Fake News? — fishfry
I've noticed from time to time that some posters on this forum misunderstand that the contemporary meaning of "proposition" is not Bob's speech. It's that thing that Jim grasped after aligning himself with Bob's frame of reference. — frank
Propositionless communication is what I was thinking of. — frank
And yet there are justified false beliefs. Paradigm shift happens by virtue of peeling them away from conventional certainty. Copernican revolution. Einstein's On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies and General Relativity are exactly such cases which show that what were justified beliefs held to be true were not true, but were justified nonetheless. — creativesoul
I don't understand this at all. What in the world does "access to truth" mean?
We can look to see if a cup is on the table. That's access enough, right? — creativesoul
And let's look at this again. When I read this question it is as if I am saying y ou cannot consider the cup being on the table to be the truth. Like I am a radical skeptic.That's access enough, right?
And yet there are justified false beliefs. — creativesoul