Is it the case that there is no 'good' reason to believe what I believe? — clemogo
If philosophy is about finding plausible ideas, but what we find plausible is based on our arbitrary intuitions, then isn't philosophy futile? — clemogo
I want to open a door, and I have the idea "I must turn the door handle in order to open the door".
My idea is partly based on my innate a priori intuition of causation - an effect needs a cause - and partly based on my empirical a posteriori observations - turning a door handle causes the effect of the door opening. — RussellA
An individual subscribes to an idea or philosophy due to their personal biases and intuitions. If the idea conforms to their biases and intuitions, they are more likely to accept it as being true. Also, it seems to me that biases and intuitions are virtually impossible to overcome completely, especially because they are probably mostly unconscious.
Moreover, an individuals biases and intuitions are ultimately arbitrary, since they are the result of the individual's genes, upbringing, education, environment, etc. (which are things that are essentially outside their control and are due to chance). — clemogo
Strange that you are reducing one's reality of the world to biases and intuitions. Bias implies inclination to prejudice. Intuition implies instinctive understanding. Both of them exclude conscious reasoning, observation, perception, cognition, ... Do you maybe reject the existence of consciousness?An individual subscribes to an idea or philosophy due to their personal biases and intuitions — clemogo
A more philosophical approach would move toward the premise as the matter of interest. — Paine
An individual subscribes to an idea or philosophy due to their personal biases and intuitions. — clemogo
There is the conscious thought "I want to open the door". — RussellA
Isn't the subconscious "wanting" not also a thought ? — RussellA
What are the implications of this for philosophy? If philosophy is about finding plausible ideas, but what we find plausible is based on our arbitrary intuitions, then isn't philosophy futile? — clemogo
I just took a sip of water. My throat felt dry, so I reached over, picked up my glass, and took a drink. There were no thoughts like "I'm thirsty" — T Clark
Do thoughts have to be words? — T Clark
Even if they're thoughts, that doesn't necessarily mean they are ideas. — T Clark
Is it the case that there is no 'good' reason to believe what I believe? — clemogo
The question is, what process is underway whereby the brain moves the arm to pick up the glass of water rather than not move the arm at all. If the brain uses cognition, then the brain uses thoughts, either subconscious or conscious. — RussellA
IE, thoughts don't have to be in words. — RussellA
IE, a thought remains in one's internal world, whilst an idea may become part of one's external world. — RussellA
If philosophy is about finding plausible ideas, but what we find plausible is based on our arbitrary intuitions, then isn't philosophy futile? — clemogo
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