Where do you see prevarication coming from? — Mww
Silencing or locking up or torturing people you see as heretics because they have beliefs or practices that don't match yours. — leo
You take this holier-than-thou attitude with your appeal to emotion using an extreme example — leo
I think it's harder to be a tyrant when you see that your point of view is a point of view, rather than when you believe it applies to everyone everywhere for all eternity. — leo
I would rather say, not so much an explanatory regress, but a tentative quality of knowledge, and by association, of truth itself. I shy away from explanatory regress because there are theoretical predicates for the human rational system, logically consistent and governed by the principles of universality and necessity. In other words, laws. But then, no matter what anybody says about it, somebody else can say something else, so.......so much for laws. That being said, experience informs us empirical knowledge is never static, even if pure a priori knowledge most certainly is. — Mww
Actually, no. Very concrete and definite reasons having to do with statistics, which I understand well enough to know when they smell. — tim wood
Anyone who supposes that guns make people safer is someone who left off thinking when he entered the room. — tim wood
Some guns can make some people safer than they were under some conditions, and with certain prior qualifications. I see no evidence of that kind of consideration. And as well, the gun that makes that person safer in some ways increases his or her risk or danger in other ways, as well as affecting the safety of others. — tim wood
So you don't answer questions but ask them, draw false conclusions, are ignorant, and throw a little shade because you think that's argument. You must be a Trump! — tim wood
Or try being a bit more intelligent - I suspect you have it in you. Or quit. You've made this thread to this point useless. See if you can put back into it the life you've sucked out of it. — tim wood
A no-brainer thought experiment: in a bar full of drunks late a Saturday night do you feel safer if all have guns or none have guns?
Or everyone: no guns? Some guns? Everyone carrying a gun at all times? In my opinion Lott is selling something and I wonder what. — tim wood
You performed a mind-independent judgment? :brow: — Terrapin Station
If the example proposition doesn’t correspond to the state of affairs unless I judge it to, on what basis am I making that judgment in the first place? — AJJ
Perhaps you can answer this for me:
State of affairs (objective fact): the cat is on the mat
Proposition: “the cat is on the mat”
Person A judges the proposition true
Person B judges the proposition false
Who is correct (from our perspective)?
Person A, Person B, both, or neither — AJJ
You won't answer a fair question? And how can any relevant question "be beside the point"? — tim wood
I have now read on Amazon a sampling of Lott's book and am deeply suspicious of his methodology and his conclusions. Others can read there as well. — tim wood
Ok. What does he say? — tim wood
And the question, "How exactly, does a gun make you safer," is a fair question. Either answer, or say why you won't. — tim wood
No, it's not beside the point. Answer the question; let's see where it goes. — tim wood
John Lott’s research shows allowing them to be legally owned and carried reduces violent crime.
— AJJ
I am unfamiliar with the research, but one thing I know immediately:it does not say what you say it says. — tim wood
Also, Lott isn't a statistician. Not that I think that that's at all the only relevant expertise. — Terrapin Station
For one, most people are not murdered by strangers, or in situations where they might be carrying concealed weapons. — Terrapin Station
In fact, the FBI’s category of people who ‘know’ their victims includes a huge number of rival gang members who know each other. This is not quite why this oft-quotes statistic is taken to mean.
If you assume it can be known, then how? Can you give any example of such objective truth? — leo
You can live consistently by your truths, that's what people do. Some believe in a higher truth that doesn't depend on them, but again I simply see that truth as their truth. — leo
What I wonder is why do you so badly need a truth that doesn't depend on you? What are you afraid of? — leo
How exactly, does a gun make you safer? Obviously there's a trick; don't fall for it. — tim wood
No, you said things like "S proposes a description and then the description corresponds with a fact" (paraphrasing, obviously). That doesn't address how the description corresponds with a fact, especially not mind-independently. You're leaving the actual correspondence part unanalyzed. — Terrapin Station
I've explained this a number of times. The dilemma is that correspondence/matching--whatever we want to call it that amounts to the same thing--has to work some way. It needs to be some process that occurs, or some property that obtains in something . . . somehow. We need to be able to describe how it works, or just what the property is. I gave you a couple examples of the sort of answer that addresses this dilemma from "your side"--from a perspective claiming that correspondence can occur mind-independently, and I talked about what the problems with those answers are for this particular issue. — Terrapin Station
He's not understanding that correspondence needs to occur or obtain somehow, and I'm focusing on just how it occurs or obtains. He's not addressing that. He just keeps taking for granted that it works without wanting to analyze how it works. — Terrapin Station
Let's try this to check if you understand the issue I'm getting at: paraphrase the dilemma in a way that I'd agree that it's what I'm saying. — Terrapin Station
The words that indicate that he understands that correspondence can't occur outside of making a judgment about it. ;-) — Terrapin Station
He's not understanding that correspondence needs to occur or obtain somehow, and I'm focusing on just how it occurs or obtains. He's not addressing that. He just keeps taking for granted that it works without wanting to analyze how it works. — Terrapin Station
If the proposition/description amounts to nothing outside of thinking about it, then how does it mind-independently correspond with anything? Mind-independently, it's nothing. Nothing can't correspond with anything, can it? — Terrapin Station
That is, just how does the correspondence relation obtain? The way it obtains is via a judgment about whether the meaning "matches" the fact. — Terrapin Station
What does a description amount to outside of thinking about the description? — Terrapin Station