But the piece set me to puzzling over the apparent desire to give priority to either scepticism or to certainty. We are not "always uncertain"; much of our daily living takes place within a frame of certainty. Our use of criteria in an attempt to justify certainty or scepticism only enters into a small portion of our world, those few occasions of hesitancy. Those criteria are public; or they are nothing. Hence we tend to talk about the stuff of which we are hesitant, the things about which we disagree. — Banno
creating the internal idea of “my understanding” — Antony Nickles
creating the internal idea of “my understanding” which I can then only hope to persuade you of, or that it is language that fails us in communicating it; in any event, that I am at least certain of myself, my unknowable specialness. — Antony Nickles
If scepticism "haunts us all the time", then so does certainty. — Banno
and Cavell’s basic claim is that Wittgenstein shows that skepticism haunts us all the time. — Antony Nickles
If "us" refers to humanity, well I think this is a bit of an overstatement about what Wittgenstein is claiming. — Richard B
…all is well with humanity. Because they keep talking, acting, and judging in similar, expected, and harmonious ways; we have meaning and understanding. — Richard B
T 6.36311 That the sun will rise to-morrow, is an hypothesis; and that means that we do not know
whether it will rise.
T 6.37 A necessity for one thing to happen because another has happened does not exist. There is only logical necessity.
Did Wittgenstein change his mind on this:
T 6.36311 That the sun will rise to-morrow, is an hypothesis; and that means that we do not know
whether it will rise. — Fooloso4
T 6.37 A necessity for one thing to happen because another has happened does not exist. There is only logical necessity. — Fooloso4
T 6.375 As there is only a logical necessity, so there is only a logical impossibility. — Fooloso4
And it is satisfied in the case of the sun (as with believing it is raining outside), because we can know whether we are right or not when the sun comes out (or checking on the rain). — Antony Nickles
a picture of knowledge. — Antony Nickles
We can know that the sun rose today, but can we know that the sun will rise tomorrow? It seems clear that he did not think we could. — Fooloso4
I think his picture of knowledge takes this into consideration. Perhaps his best expression of this is the river of knowledge from On Certainty. — Fooloso4
"[In a country that is strange to us because we do not understand the traditions of the people (even knowing the language)]...one human being can be a complete enigma to another. ...We do not understand the people. ...We cannot find our feet with them." — Investigations 3rd, p. 223
Yes, the sun. One type of thing. — Antony Nickles
It is unclear what your "this" is referring to. — Antony Nickles
My guess is that you are imagining every example leads to a conclusion about our approach to everything (that there is only one form of skepticism: the problem of a foundation for a particular criteria for knowledge). — Antony Nickles
I take you to be framing it that he only has one "picture of knowledge", and, for that matter, that there is only one sense of "certainty". — Antony Nickles
That is to say that I don't find where this is relevant to the matter at hand. — Antony Nickles
‘Disappointment with criteria – Cavell, Rush Rhees, and skepticism’. — Antony Nickles
Imagining Wittgenstein somehow “solves” skepticism or dismisses it, does not take into account that his investigation destroys everything that is built in response to it only to see that part of it is true. There is no fact that will stop things from going sideways, from us turning out wrong about what we thought was right, in following a rule yet still being guilty because whether a rule was followed doesn’t take into account who we are. — Antony Nickles
You should be skeptical of imagining what I am imagining. What you are imagining that I am imagining is wrong. — Fooloso4
If this agreement does not mostly occur, we do not have a language at all; thus, there is nothing to be skeptical about. — Richard B
However, Wittgenstein goes on to see that the workings of our relationship to others is not one of knowledge, but that the desire (for our relation to be based on something other than me) is a basic human response to (the fear of) the fact that we are separate from others, that this is part of the human condition (and not just an intellectual problem). — Antony Nickles
Wittgenstein… focuses on the intellectual problem the philosophical minded get themselves into. — Richard B
"I know that a sick man is lying here? Nonsense! I am sitting at his bedside, I am looking attentively into his face.- So, I don't know, then, that there is a sick man lying here? Neither the question nor the assertion makes sense."
What he is doing is showing how the concept "to know" does not make sense in this circumstance. — Richard B
The above can be summarized by saying that "other minds" is an oxymoron. — sime
…one's beliefs concerning a person's behavioural disposition effects the course and extent of one's empathy towards that person. — sime
That someone has a “mind” is not the picture of the other I am arguing for; what I am doing is continuing on from Wittgenstein’s investigation into why philosophy looked at it that way, and from Cavell’s reading of him that that desire (for knowledge to be the “answer”) actually shows something about our situation as humans and thus affects our ordinary relation to other people. — Antony Nickles
What I feel remains to be explored further is the process of "finding our feet with them", say, as a matter of imagining ourselves as them, getting at why one might want to judge as they do. Maybe: in taking them seriously; allowing another's reasons to be or become intelligible; respecting their interests by taking their expressions as a commitment of their self, their character as it were (what "type" of person they are). I take this not as a matter of critique, but of letting them be "strange" to us without rejection (tolerating but not assuming/resigned to difference); with open curiosity, (cultural) humility (that my interests and context are not everyone's). In a sense: understanding as empathy; understanding in the sense of: being understanding (Websters: vicariously experiencing the [interests] of another; imagining the other's attitudes as legitimate; the imaginative projection of [myself] into [the other] so that [they] appear to be infused with [me, being a person]). — Antony Nickles
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