Well stated. Bears repeating (reposting) on every thread.I say ignorance, but it's an axiom of mine that we're all ignorant, in the face of which we resolve to learn and know as much as we can as well as we can, the integrity of our efforts together with what we win as knowledge being our just, true, and only rewards (maybe some of us get the girl too, maybe, somewhere). Adherence to ignorance, on the other hand, when identified as ignorance, I call stupidity, and practitioners stupid. Not to be confused with incapable or unintelligent. And these persistent stupid are eventually revealed as enemies. Of reason, understanding, knowledge itself, across history, of everything of worth. — tim wood
Why "should" it? Any answer to the second question will always beg the first question. To wit: How do you know that your answer to "Is it even possible for any human to know?" is true? :yikes:The question, "How do you know?"...should probably take a back seat to the question, "Is it even possible for any human to know?" — Frank Apisa
:up: Or "Mr. Coin"-tosses ...↪Frank Apisa But absolutely never, in that case, to profess any knowledge based on that ignorance. — tim wood
tim wood
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↪Frank Apisa But absolutely never, in that case, to profess any knowledge based on that ignorance.
As to knowledge itself, that seems in every case particular knowledge, always associated with the that which is known, and in that sense, known.
Ignorance, grounds only for itself. The "I don't know" is worthy of respect. But it must thereafter be silent - in terms of knowledge.
In terms of nonsense, however, ignorance often does have a lot to say, and usually says it and often insists on it. Perhaps the operative word in "how do you know?" is the "how." If a claim cannot assay that, then what differentiates it from halluciation, madness, or fond "thinking"? — tim wood
The question, "How do you know?"...should probably take a back seat to the question, "Is it even possible for any human to know?"
— Frank Apisa
Why "should" it? Any answer to the second question will always beg the first question. To wit: How do you know that your answer to "Is it even possible for any human to know?" is true? :yikes: — 180 Proof
↪Frank Apisa But absolutely never, in that case, to profess any knowledge based on that ignorance.
— tim wood
:up: Or "Mr. Coin"-tosses — 180
180 Proof
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↪Frank Apisa Your gibberish sails righy over my head again, Frank. — 180 Proof
"It is MUCH more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one." People actually feel comfortable expressing the later as though it is a product of logic, reason, science or math. — Frank Apisa
It seems to me that on a philosophy website that question is the one question that may always be asked, and must always be answered. Some people may have their own reasons for not answering. But answering is the price of playing. In sum, I argue that any person or argument non-responsive to the question may be dismissed - a short extension of Hitchens's razor. And, that we all ought not to "play" with them. Either they'll learn to play better or go away.
The underlying sense of it - my argument - is that when out of the raw limestone of mere ignorance we try to find and carve out our "angel" of knowledge, a stupid ignorance conceals just what that angel might look like or be. Who wants to be deprived of or derailed from that experience? — tim wood
Or a guess. I guess on things often. I call my guesses...guesses. — Frank Apisa
tim wood
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"It is MUCH more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one." People actually feel comfortable expressing the later as though it is a product of logic, reason, science or math.
— Frank Apisa — tim wood
Olivier5
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Or a guess. I guess on things often. I call my guesses...guesses.
— Frank Apisa
Are you even absolutely certain that you are guessing? — Olivier5
tim wood
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↪Frank Apisa Uh, Frank, I did quote you. I used the quote function. What is reproduced in my post is exactly what you wrote in yours - is why it's called the quote function. Maybe a little hair of the dog? — tim wood
Do we really need to know how we know, to be able to know something?
— ChatteringMonkey
It seems to me that on a philosophy website that question is the one question that may always be asked.
— tim wood
Ships over the horizon passing in the night? — tim wood
tim wood
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↪Frank Apisa Don't act like the crazy man on the corner talking to himself. It does not become you, and it's a waste of time and effort. — tim wood
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