They? And how can a belief itself be anything other than a belief? And certainly how can it be absolute? — tim wood
It speaks to both the believer and the belief that they form, have, and/or hold.
— creativesoul
They? — tim wood
It speaks to both the believer and the belief that they form, have, and/or hold. — creativesoul
I write these words sitting on the deck of a ship.
I lift my eyes and see a piece of string — a line, I must
call it at sea — stretched more or less horizontally
above me. I find myself thinking ‘that is a clothes-
line’, meaning that it was put there to hang washing
on. When I decide that it was put there for that
purpose I am presupposing that it was put there for
some purpose.
prop. i. Every statement that anybody ever makes is made in answer to a question.
...different sets of absolute presuppositions correspond not only with differences in the structure of what is generally called scientific thought but with differences in the entire fabric of civilization.
(RGC, EM, ch 7, part 2) — Pantagruel
Absolute presuppositions are not considered, weighed, and chosen, although some scientific theories do evolve them more consciously — tim wood
But if be said thatbsomeone holds a presupposition is that not equivalent to saying that they believe it? — Janus
If belief is the consequence of some cognition relative to a thing in conjunction with a judgement made upon it with respect to the subjective validity of the cognition, it follows that presupposition does not lend itself to any of those cognitive faculties relating thought to an object, — Mww
Agreed, and sustained in Prop. 5, “absolute presuppositions are not propositions”, and if not a proposition, cannot be considered in propositional form, which weighing and choosing would seem to require. — Mww
Why should we construe belief so narrowly? — Pantagruel
Beliefs apply to things like cultural norms and habitual practices and for the vast majority of people take the form of presuppositions. — Pantagruel
If they are presuppositions, then they are "pre-supposed". — Pantagruel
They are "fundamental hypotheses" about the nature of reality, not expressible in propositional form directly but consonant with some set of relative propositions, which are taken for granted and acted upon as if they were real, in consequence of which is engendered all manner of actual behaviours, including scientific theorization. — Pantagruel
Yes, but these are relative presuppositions, — Mww
There is no reason to believe that absolute presuppositions are not presupposed. — Pantagruel
Problem is, of course, neither Kant nor Collingwood venture an altogether satisfactory origin of the categories in the former, nor absolute presuppositions in the latter. They each arrive at his own version of some irreducible metaphysical necessity, and each recognize they’ve tacitly boxed themselves in. — Mww
Hey.....no fair confusing me, dammit!!! I had to go back through all my comments to see if I indicated absolute presuppositions were not presupposed, and I couldn’t find where I gave that indication. I’m arguing contrary to your claim that presuppositions are beliefs, which I emphatically reject on purely metaphysical grounds. So, no, there is no reason to think absolute presuppositions are not presupposed. In fact, it is no other way possible for them to be logically viable, then to be presupposed. — Mww
In what sense is a "presupposition" not a kind of belief? — Pantagruel
Found this particularly troubling... — creativesoul
Function, function, function. As means of transportation, you can have it that cars and bicycles are the same. But they're different. Can you discern the differences? Which would you prefer to take to the store? — tim wood
I don't understand the analogy at all. — Pantagruel
Beliefs are more fundamental than knowledge — Pantagruel
In what sense is a "presupposition" not a kind of belief? — Pantagruel
In ordinary linguistics, they may be, from which arises the relative presupposition, according to Collingwood. In metaphysics, on the other hand, where I stake my epistemological tentpoles, presuppositions are taken as necessary conditions, re: absolute presuppositions, and beliefs, at best, are merely contingent judgements. Only here does it become apparent that the negation of a judgement does not falsify the presupposition that supported it. “Elvis is not dead”, a possible belief, has no affect on the presupposition of Elvis, the condition necessary for the belief. We don’t need to analyze the proposition to grant the necessity of the presupposition contained in it, even while analyzing the truth of the proposition itself. — Mww
If we allow a supposition to be a belief, which is not contradictory, then from mere language we see a pre-supposition makes explicit that which has yet to meet the criteria of belief. . — Mww
And (p.51), "It might seem that there are three schools of thought in physics, Newtonian, Kantian, and Einsteinian, let us all them, which stand committed respectively to the three following metaphysical propositions:
1. Some events have causes.
2. All events have causes.
3. No events have causes."
RGC then points out that while seeming contradictory, each of these stands as a foundational and structural part of the science that presupposes it, and as such, the question as to the truth of any one of them is a nonsense question because their value as presuppositions lies in their "efficacy" and not in their being thought true. — tim wood
Not according to ordinary usage, and what better determines the meaning of terms? — Janus
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