Well, sure, in a way. If a philosophical argument were indisputable fact it would have already crossed over into the threshold of science already, graduating from a theory or proposal to that of a fact or law. Wouldn't it? — Outlander
I think that each of us has a black hole within our consciousness, to work with and climb out of, and perhaps we need to find our own inner philosopher to guide the way through this darkness. But, it is like an alchemical quest of healing, of finding the treasure within the depths of the blackness and, of transmuting the dark energies into radiant wisdom. — Jack Cummins
Take logic for instance. It makes a big fuss about proof and avoiding cicrcular reasoning but it turns out it itself can't be proven without resorting to a circulus probando for to justify it is to assume it proven. — TheMadFool
To my way of thinking, 'circular reasoning', where needed, is not problematic IFF 'the circle' is virtuous (i.e. a positive feedback loop) and not vicious (i.e. a negative feedback loop). 'Formal & informal fallacies' tend to exemplify the latter and -axiomatic systems of valid inferences' exemplify the former. Maybe you can cite some examples of (philosophical) circumstances, Fool, in which virtuous circles are problematic (or self-defeating/refuting) as well.Take logic for instance. — TheMadFool
Does that seem equivalent to a black hole? — Tom Storm
To my way of thinking, 'circular reasoning', where needed, is not problematic IFF 'the circle' is virtuous (i.e. a positive feedback loop) and not vicious (i.e. a negative feedback loop). 'Formal & informal fallacies' tend to exemplify the latter and -axiomatic systems of valid inferences' exemplify the former. Maybe you can cite some examples of (philosophical) circumstances, Fool, in which virtuous circles are problematic (or self-defeating/refuting) as well — 180 Proof
So you're denying that the distinction between (e.g.) reflective equilibrium & begging the question makes a difference or that the latter is a negative feedback loop and the former a positive feedback loop? — 180 Proof
Just checking, because you suggested previously there wasn't.There definitely is a difference between the two — TheMadFool
Just checking, because suggested previously there wasn't. — 180 Proof
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