SophistiCat: I believe in the Golden Rule - do to others as you would have them do to you.
Janus: That's bullshit. You beat your kids, treat your employees like crap, and cheat your customers.
Is that a legitimate argument? — T Clark
Saying that an argument is vacuous characterizes an argument, not a person, so this wouldn't be ad hominem. — SophistiCat
On the contrary, It's only a fallacy if your intention is to explain what is wrong with the argument. The way you phrased it here would be an ad hominem, because you are judging an argument on the basis of the character of the person who put it forward. If you decline to engage with the argument, then you cannot be committing a fallacy. You cannot break any rules if you aren't playing to begin with — SophistiCat
The credibility and basis of knowledge of members is sometimes an issue. — T Clark
What's the difference between saying that someone is not worth listening to, and saying that their arguments are vacuous, and thus refuted? — Janus
Do you mean invalid or unsound, or in fact vacuous?
If the latter, then your pair above means roughly the same. — baker
What's the difference between saying that someone is not worth listening to, and saying that their arguments are vacuous, and thus refuted? — Janus
Saying that an argument is vacuous characterizes an argument, not a person, so this wouldn't be ad hominem. — SophistiCat
Dr. Baker: Mr. Clark, you have an inflamed spleen. I recommend you take this medication once a day till it resolves itself.
Mr. Clark: I'd like to see your med school diploma please. — T Clark
Oh, I like that. Yours? — Mww
Perception informs of a general affect on sense, sensation informs which sense is affected. Both of which are sufficient for being aware of the presence of objects. But neither tells us what is affecting, nothing is yet being constructed, conceptually nor intuitively. The cognitive system that does the constructing, is not yet in play.
From the physical point of view, all that is between the external world out there, and the brain in here. The eyes, ears, skin, etc., don’t tell us anything at all about what is affecting them, only that there is something. — Mww
I can see the legitimacy of saying we sense phenomena, in effect, that’s exactly what we do. But I do not grant legitimacy to the notion that phenomena are sensations. Phenomena are that to which the sensations belong, not that that’s what they are. — Mww
If you said that bartricks was not worth listening to on account of him being an obnoxious dimwit, you would not committing an ad hominem fallacy - on the contrary, you would be very reasonable. You would be committing the fallacy if you said that batricks' argument was refuted on account of him being an obnoxious dimwit, but who ever does that? — SophistiCat
Then you will be trod upon.
Just because philosophizers don't use AK 47s doesn't mean they aren't engaging in battle. — baker
Why do my beliefs need to be justified?
Hi, could either of you expound? Or provide a link to an appropriate SEP article? I don't think I'm familiar with this yet. — Benkei
Honestly I find myself becoming more and more a naive realist, but being surprised at what that really entails... — Moliere
No, it isn’t any more conventional; it is nonetheless conventional. Unqualified, stand-alone objects, as such, are conventionally that which is in space and time. — Mww
Of course we call the objects presented to consciousness 'phenomena'. — Janus
I don’t. Objects aren’t presented to consciousness; phenomena are but phenomena aren’t objects. Objects are presented to sensibility....the faculties for physical impressions, the senses.
What I haven’t said anything about, the other half of it, is the a priori presentation to consciousness of mere conceptions, fully abstracted notions, ideas....the things we think but never perceive. — Mww
You can’t have a hole that exists on its own, whereas you can have an object that exists on its own. — Wayfarer
The point is, the whole of the empirical world in space and time is the creation of our understanding, which apprehends all the objects of empirical knowledge within it as being in some part of that space and at some part of that time: and this is as true of the earth before there was life as it is of the pen I am now holding a few inches in front of my face and seeing slightly out of focus as it moves across the paper.
Presentation of what, to what? — Mww
What is cognized is representation of that which is in the external world — Mww
You can get national data over what you are looking for if you do some digging. — Christoffer
No. They are saying that everything there is to know about the mind, can be known by way of the objective sciences. And that's all I have to say at this point, thanks for your responses. — Wayfarer
I’m trying to tease out the contribution of the subject not just to the appearance of the object but to the essense of the object. — Joshs
Knowledge is taken to consist in a faithful mirroring of a mind-independent reality. — Joshs
But they're still trying to eliminate something. What, pray tell? — Wayfarer
I think it's a priori. The skull is not transparent. The cornea is, and light strikes the receptors in the retina, but those stimuli are then interpreted - which is the point at issue. — Wayfarer
Kant argues against Berkeley's idealism in which he agrees that there is indeed something beyond ideas themselves. But as I have already said, I don't agree that idealism means that 'the world is all in the mind'. What I'm arguing is that all knowledge of the world has an inextricably subjective component, which is not apparent in experience (as per Kant and Husserl) but without which knowledge is not possible.
Materialism and physicalism both overlook or ignore the irreducibly subjective nature of knowledge in that sense. — Wayfarer
Phenomenology argues that the subject is not separate from the object. — Joshs
I suppose you can say that, but we can have certain knowledge of mathematical proofs, and so on. — Wayfarer
Anyway, as I tried to say before, it's Saturday morning here, my other half is annoyed with me playing with my invisible friends, so have to sign out for a while. Bye. — Wayfarer
I refer you to the answers I've given you many previous times, which you say are a dodge, or are not answering your question, or failing to see the point. I might address it, and others might fail to understand what I've said. There's really nothing further I can do about that, either. — Wayfarer
And you're an idealist of some flavor, right? Well then, how can you use physical sciences and (interpretations of) physical theories to support without self-inconsistency your purportedly non-physicalist (idealist) philosophical positions? — 180 Proof
Let me have another go. I've already said, in this thread, that I'm an empical realist. As I understand it, Kant also says that whilst he is a transcendental idealist, he's an empirical realist also. I don't see a conflict. But almost everyone here immediately assumes, well, if you're an idealist, 'you think the world is all in your mind'. People said the same of Kant after the first edition of CPR! That's why in the second edition he included the critique of Berkeley. — Wayfarer
In that case, you misunderstand my position, as often, but with the amount of incoming flak, I can't really deal with it right now. — Wayfarer
It's an a priori argument, based on the observation that there's no light inside the skull. — Wayfarer
In short - the world is not simply given. It is in some fundamental sense projected by the observing mind. The sense in which it exists outside of or apart from that mind is an empty question, because nothing we can know is ever outside of or apart from the act of knowing by which we are concious of the existence of the world in the first place. This doesn't mean the world is all in my mind, but that the mind - yours, mine, the species and cultural mind of h. sapiens - is an inextricable foundation of the world we know, but we can't see it, because it is what we're looking through, and with. — Wayfarer
On the contrary. In places where vaccination numbers are high new cases, hospitalization, and death has dropped dramatically. — Fooloso4
Are you gonna break the restrictions? Are you gonna go out in public? Socialize with people who are unknowing about your refusal? — Christoffer
