What people claim to believe can be a long distance from what they actually do. — Pantagruel
I take Kant's to be a construction, Collingwood's to be a finding. — tim wood
The short historical perspective which Kant inherited from Voltaire was at this point his undoing — tim wood
I would say that, according to ordinary parlance, there is little difference between the two terms....... — Janus
.......although a presupposition might be considered more basic. — Janus
presupposition
noun [ C or U ]
uk
/ˌpriː.sʌp.əˈzɪʃ.ən/ us
/ˌpriː.sʌp.əˈzɪʃ.ən/
something that you believe is true without having any proof:....
....So suppositions and presuppositions are species of belief, but not all beliefs are suppositions in this strict sense, of course ( that is some beliefs are founded on evidence).
Now, Collingwood uses a term,"absolute presupposition" to denote those presuppositions which are bedrock for all metaphysical and physical inquiry. I see no reason to think that he could not equally well have used the term "absolute supposition" or "absolute belief" to denote the same thing.... — Janus
If there can be presuppositions which are "not true", then since presuppositions, under any reasonable interpretation of the meaning of the term, are also both suppositions and beliefs, — Janus
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
What I've been saying has no argument with any of that. That said, I don't agree the three examples of absolute presuppositions Tim Wood quotes there have no truth value, as I thought you at least, if not Tim had been claiming. I don't believe "the question as to the truth of any one of them is a nonsense question" as Tim says. It does not follow from the fact that we may not be able to establish the truth of such propositions that they have no truth value, all that follows is that whatever we believe about the question as to whether some, all or no events have causes will be a matter of faith.
"Some events have causes", " All events have causes", "No events have causes": of course these are, whatever else they might be, beliefs. They are also suppositions or presuppositions. If they count as absolute presuppositions, then they count also as absolute suppositions or absolute beliefs; as I said before, the logic is inexorable. (Personally I don't think the "absolute" works very well, 'foundational' or 'bedrock' would have been better in my view). — Janus
Collingwood wants to say that these have no truth value, — creativesoul
He does not say that. — tim wood — creativesoul
But how can we know what a person truly believes?Exactly. There is a correspondence between the quality of belief and the quality of the presentation (enactment) of the belief. — Pantagruel
Also Tim apparently disagrees with you and or seems to be contradicting himself, so one (or both) of you has misunderstood Collingwood or else he also contradicts himself: — Janus
I don't see how this works in practice.Personally, I assume there are manifestations of genuine belief that distinguish it from fake belief. That's what the bit you quoted suggests. Authenticity, credibility, efficacy, communicability, comprehensibility. — Pantagruel
I don't see how this works in practice.
I don't see how one could see through a person's strategizing and cunning. — baker
Absolute presuppositions have no truth value. — T Clark
This is what happens when someone pushes the boundaries in proposing a concept, trying to assign to the concept, a function which is impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't agree the three examples of absolute presuppositions Tim Wood quotes there have no truth value — Janus
as I said before, the logic is inexorable. — Janus
There seem mainly two groups arguing in this thread. One is those who have not read any RGC but are quite sure his ideas are nonsense. And others who have read more-or-less but have not, more-or-less, understood what he is about with his absolute presuppositions. — tim wood
I haven't claimed that so-called absolute presuppositions have truth value or don't have truth value according to Collingwood. — Janus
1. Some events have causes.
2. All events have causes.
3. No events have causes. — Janus
It does not follow from the fact that we may not be able to establish the truth of such propositions that they have no truth value, — Janus
I've come to the conclusion that the idea of "absolute presuppositions" as proposed by Collingwood, is itself contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
What Collingwood (seems to have) found is that any endeavor is characterized not alone by what it does and how it does it, but also by what it implicitly takes absolutely for granted, its absolute presuppositions, and taking that thus never explicitly questions them. One may call them the axioms of the enterprise. — tim wood
RGC was an historian. While I have no idea how or why he came to his conclusions - and would like to - I can imagine a day early in his career as a historian recognizing for the first time that different people at different times thought differently, and, that this thinking in each case was not a deficient version of what came after, but was rather something simpler: a different set of axioms. He observed that folks tend not to question their axioms and instead are likely to jealously guard and protect them on those occasions when they do surface. — tim wood
Hey tim wood, are we allowed to call you "Timmy." At least I capitalized it. — T Clark
There seem mainly two groups arguing in this thread. One is those who have not read any RGC but are quite sure his ideas are nonsense. And others who have read more-or-less but have not, more-or-less, understood what he is about with his absolute presuppositions. — tim wood
The essay is very nuanced. I'm impressed by much of it, and find myself refraining from critiquing it yet, although there are a few problems within it. — creativesoul
And here, when you get a settled sense of your own objections, we may get meat in the stew. I am eager to hear them because if based in the text they - your objections - can only add light, either in refining and improving our own view or forcing us to confront yours, to and for the benefit of all. Take your time; it's imo a very interesting topic; and no need to shoot from the hip - too much of that already.although there are a few problems within it. — creativesoul
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