Is that "other" advised? As in, would you consider yourself an 'essentialist'? If so, may I ask what would that involve - that things have a set of characteristics which make them what they are, and that the task of science and philosophy is their discovery and expression? Or that essence precedes existence?...other essentialists... — Apustimelogist
Which, of course, was Wittgenstein's response. So I remain puzzled as to what it is you are actually proposing. However, it's a big topic and as you say, peripheral to this thread, so we might leave it there.What we discussed in that thread isn't Aristotle's answer to the question Wittgenstein took up, just an ancillary point that the positive skeptic's position is self-undermining. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I was saying much the same thing. — J
So, not so sure about the "obligatory".Essentially, what we want to know is whether "a reason" must cash out to "an obligatory cause" of holding a particular belief. This is troubling, as discussed on the thread. — J
They didn't even have the number zero. — frank
...for someone so averse to conversations of God — Hanover
Such arguments are very old — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't recognise what I understand of the discussion of rules that came from PI and Kripke's Wittgenstein in this paragraph. It's as if you are talking about something quite other. To my eye it misrepresents that argument.The "rule following argument," like the many other empiricist arguments from underdetermination, relies on presupposing empiricism's epistemic presuppositions and its impoverished anthropology (which denies intellectus from the outset). Since these arguments lead to all sorts of radical conclusions: that words do not have meanings in anything like the classical realist sense, that they cannot refer to things, that induction—and thus natural science—is not rationally justifiable, that we cannot know if the sun will rise tomorrow, that we don't know when we are performing addition instead of an infinite number of other operations, that nothing like knowledge as classically understood can exist, etc., one might suppose that the original premises should be challenged. Indeed, epistemic presuppositions that lead to this sort of skepticism would seem to be self-refuting; they cannot secure even the most basic, bedrock knowledge we possess. — Count Timothy von Icarus
How do we know that it's the language that underpins the metaphysics and the epistemology, rather than the reverse — J
Like the dog chasing the rat up a tree? Here's a minefield. Fine, but I'll insist that there can be no "pre-linguistic metaphysical practice" that we cannot put into words post-hoc; otherwise how could we be said to recognise it as a practice? I think this a swamp not worth approaching....a pre-linguistic metaphysical practice... — J
This is difficult. And hence interesting.Some confusion here, likely my fault. By "two phenomena" I didn't mean p and its negation, but rather 1. the phenomenon of (p v ~p) as what I called a logical law, and 2. the phenomenon of (p v ~p) as a description of what must be the case concerning objects in the world. (Again, by using words like "phenomena" or "objects" I'm only seeking neutral nouns; no metaphysical baggage implied.) So I think your response involving Frege, while true, doesn't address my puzzle. My puzzle wants to know how it is the case -- if it is the case -- that we can understand 'p' as referring either to a logical proposition or, say, a rock. — J
How about if, for starters, we both agree to eschew "game" analogies. I've often wondered if Witt understood the connotations of "game" in English. Certainly the implication that "It's all a game!" drives many people batty -- but I doubt he meant it that way, as a trivial pastime we could just as easily not engage in, or exchange for a different one. The point, surely, is about rules, and about how knowing the rules is a spade-turning experience. — J
Perhaps. But it is what I had in mind.Okay, but that's not what you said in the post I responded to. — Hanover
The dots dropped out when I used the quote function. See the original, linked.I wish you'd number your three elements for clarity. — Hanover
Sure. Some stuff is both good theology and good philosophy.1) Not all theological systems require scripture be the word of God, which would mean your objection is to only certain theologies, — Hanover
I don't agree. It will suffice to point out that "bad" philosophical arguments include those that rest on authority, divine or otherwise.(2) you need to define what "philosophical argument" rightly is to explain why your criteria are necessary to remain within in it. — Hanover
Well, there's a lot to unpack here.But practice changes too. I wonder if one of the criticisms of psychologism works against this Wittgensteinian view as much as it does against psychologism: if logic is relative to our practices then it's contingent. — Jamal
In summary there are three things that identify a move from a philosophical enquiry to mere theology:
claiming that god is the answer to a philosophical question
using scripture, revelation or other religious authority in an argument
entering into a philosophical argument in bad faith. — Banno
I’m thinking that pretty much all a child has is the essence of mum. No words or definitions. Mum may mean security, nourishment, and the like, on an instinctual or just ‘feel good’ level. — praxis
What is it to have "some concept of it" beyond being able to identify it?If we can identify something we must have some conception of it... — praxis
He doesn't use the words, perhaps; but his reactions show something.......he does not know what is 'sugar' or what is 'intruder'. — Jacques Maritain, The Cultural Impact of Empiricism
And yet here you are.First, I didn’t think you could understand me, so why bother. — Fire Ologist
Again, if you want me to respond, link my name. A common courtesy. I'll not be going over your posts looking to see if you ask me something. You are not that interesting.Second, There are fifty things prior to my posts with Leon that you didn’t respond to. — Fire Ologist
I agree. Seems I erred in expecting curtesy from you.Third, Seems muddle-headed for you expect courtesy from me. — Fire Ologist
:blush:It is an article of Banno's faith than anything like religious faith has no place at the table of philosophical discourse — Wayfarer
I don't want it to be aporetic at all. — J
It just doesn't seem all that far from saying "they would not be participating in the same activity" to saying they would not have the intuitions—the experience of the agreement of logic with what we do—that people have when they successfully do x and y. — Jamal
A student says "That seems right—roses are flowers, and some flowers fade quickly, so it makes sense that some roses might be among those that fade quickly." But the intuition that the argument is valid, is misplaced.All roses are flowers.
Some flowers fade quickly.
∴ Some roses fade quickly.
were the student replies “But unicorns don’t exist! How can Charlie have a horn?” - examples such as this can be found on these forums. The argument is valid, but for some, counterintuitive.All unicorns have horns.
Charlie is a unicorn.
∴ Charlie has a horn.
Usefulness isn't determined by some rule. That's kinda the point.If I'm misrepresenting you, surely you can lay out what determines usefulness then. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If we do not accept that the frog can be both alive and dead, then a logic that allows this is not suitable.Pick one that does the job you want done, or that will extend and enhance the conversation.
I've asked this question to Banno many times and never received anything but deflection. — Count Timothy von Icarus
