We are social creatures and so the potential has to be socially constructed. It has to come from us collectively and pragmatically. — apokrisis
Well, I did not make any statement about the causal relationship between the fact of inadequate pay and the fact of pay inequality. But, supposing that that causal relationship is as you describe, I use the word "secondary" in the sense of importance. — SynodOfDordt
You are using potential here in a completely different way than what I am referring to in the OP (the secularized Medieval notion that we are manifesting some essence of what it is to be human by contributing to scientific/technological pursuits or having X experience). — schopenhauer1
So when I use the term "potential" here, I mean that we do not need to be born in the first place in order to have a particular X experience, or contribute to technological, or scientific accomplishment. — schopenhauer1
All too true. The issue as you pointed out is one of demonstrability. To add an example, one can hold an intuitive certainty about something—a gut feeling—and this belief can in fact be infallibly true, or infallibly correct (when ontically appraised from some supposedly omniscient perspective). But—as you’ve mentioned—if one has no means of evidencing this gut-felt certitude to be infallible, one would have no means of knowing whether or not it in fact is infallible. — javra
This sort of leads its way into the issue of what justification is. There’s foundationalism, coherentism, or Susan Haack’s proposal of a hybrid, which I favor (I’ve yet to find reason to take other theories of justification seriously). — javra
All the same, if truth has no bearing on justification, then I so far find that the term “justification” would be devoid of meaning. — javra
So if knowledge is belief that is believed to be justified, it would then need to be belied to be true. — javra
Also, doesn’t a belief need to be to some extent justified by oneself in order for one to believe it to be justified by oneself? — javra
then the fact of inequality is entirely a secondary issue, one that is resolved incidentally by tackling the more pressing problem of inadequate pay. — SynodOfDordt
Even if not everything here rings true, I yet maintain that there should be first made an explicit distinction between fallible knowledge (which always holds the potential to be incorrect and thereby false in what it upholds as true belief) and infallible knowledge, which by definition is incapable of being false (specifically in that which it affirms to be true). — javra
I submit that the gender pay-gap, even if it exists, is either (a) not a problem in any sense, or (b) a problem in an incidental sense, that may be resolved by addressing a yet more pressing problem related to inadequate pay. Therefore, we should not consider the gender pay-gap as a problem to be solved in any sense. — SynodOfDordt
To answer this question, you simply need to compare the suicide rates and accidental drug overdoses of those in the musical/acting industry and those in the technical industry. This comparison shows that the artists seem to have a much harder time finding happiness. — Harry Hindu
So how could one believe the same belief to be both justified and false? — Metaphysician Undercover
And we're not discussing whether a false belief can be justified, we're discussing whether one can believe that a belief is both false and justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
So you have contradictory justified beliefs then. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you are considering both options, to believe in God, and to not believe in God, then you allow that one of these is false, but you are not believing that a particular one of them is false. — Metaphysician Undercover
You could say that it "was" a justified belief, but notice that (1) in the op requires that it "is" a justified belief. — Metaphysician Undercover
But if you thought that it was just an opinion, and other people might have contrary opinions which were reasonable, you wouldn't designate the belief as false. A false belief is not a reasonable opinion. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you believe that X was a justified belief, but is no longer a justified belief, then it is still a lie if you state "X is a justified belief". — Metaphysician Undercover
Humans have no ideal potential state to live up to. — schopenhauer1
I don't see how it could be the case that one could believe that a belief is false, yet also have reason to believe in it. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, when the belief turns out to be false it's no longer justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
No of course not. The "net gain" criteria is closer to a last resort, not the first. Equality in treatment, or justice is the first. — Samuel Lacrampe
For the sake of argument, let's assume that such an act is indeed unjust. It is also no doubt merciful. How do you now judge the merciful act to be morally good? — Samuel Lacrampe
I admit I forget what the dispute was about on this one. — Samuel Lacrampe
A house is on fire. You are a rescuer whose goal is to save the beings stuck inside. There is one human, one animal (say a dog) — Samuel Lacrampe
No, what I am saying is that it is impossible to believe that X is false and also believe that X is justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, I'm saying that you cannot honestly claim that you belief a specific belief to be both false and justified. If you belief that it is false, this denies the possibility of you believing that it is justified, because a false belief is known to be unsound and this contradicts "justified". — Metaphysician Undercover
An invalid attempt at justification is not justification. If it is not valid then is doesn't qualify as a justification. X is not justified if the claimed "justification" for X is not valid. — Metaphysician Undercover
And as this "net gain" criteria is objective, it is compatible with an objective morality. — Samuel Lacrampe
But now, you say it is merciful to put him in jail; which to me is a form of punishment. — Samuel Lacrampe
It now sounds like we are arguing about the same position, namely, that the act of "imposing my desires on others (and no other reasons)" cannot pass the golden rule without contradictions. — Samuel Lacrampe
If you are going to use this absurd line of reasoning how can you claim that moral law is objective? When it is demonstrable that morals are different across time, culture, nation, and tribe, and between persons within those categories.
It is you that is acting stupidly, not me. — charleton
man (without an article) itself refers to the species, to humanity, or "mankind", as a whole.
It is simply an historical fact that women for centuries have not been considered as men's equals.
Such a position has been the moral standard until the 20thC. — charleton
Why are you trying to deny the basic facts of history? — charleton
Otherwise we could justify all sorts of irrational beliefs by asserting falsities. — Metaphysician Undercover
Is that an accurate description of communism? — Purple Pond
The communist economy is --- inefficient. — Purple Pond