I get the impression from discussions on the internet and reading philosophers that people are not being honest or honest about their biases. — Andrew4Handel
they are not given equal weight to all arguments — Andrew4Handel
For example I think discussions about the nature of mind can be influenced by peoples metaphysical commitments and to some extent they have ruled out alternatives and or are committed to rejecting alternatives. — Andrew4Handel
I suppose the difference is between looking for evidence of black swans — Andrew4Handel
But to me Philosophy should be completely open minded and not based on preserving one's own world view.
A similar issue is with God debates. I think some people are so committed to favouring gods non existence that they are not given equal weight to all arguments (but they don't explicitly state this) — Andrew4Handel
The difference is the only evidence for God's existence are the words of human beings that have an emotional stake in their belief being true. Why don't we give equal weight to the positive claims of the existence of Thor, unicorns and Elvis being alive?A similar issue is with God debates. I think some people are so committed to favouring gods non existence that they are not given equal weight to all arguments (but they don't explicitly state this). I suppose the difference is between looking for evidence of black swans and looking for evidence black swans don't exist (confirmation bias). — Andrew4Handel
But a lot of debates or enquiries are not like this...... and so I think biases can be disguised. For example I think discussions about the nature of mind can be influenced by peoples metaphysical commitments and to some extent they have ruled out alternatives and or are committed to rejecting alternatives. But to me Philosophy should be completely open minded and not based on preserving one's own world view. — Andrew4Handel
But a lot of debates or enquiries are not like this...... and so I think biases can be disguised. For example I think discussions about the nature of mind can be influenced by peoples metaphysical commitments and to some extent they have ruled out alternatives and or are committed to rejecting alternatives. But to me Philosophy should be completely open minded and not based on preserving one's own world view. — Andrew4Handel
But what would the black swans look like in the case of God? — Marchesk
A position, a belief, is not a bias. A gun rights activist is not rationalizing a bias, she is defending a position — T Clark
I don't think you could come to a position in a gun debate in the context of the United States culture simply on reason alone. If someone owns several guns which they have easy access to that does not seem to put them in a very objective position. — Andrew4Handel
The difference is the only evidence for God's existence are the words of human beings that have an emotional stake in their belief being true. Why don't we give equal weight to the positive claims of the existence of Thor, unicorns and Elvis being alive? — Harry Hindu
Based on the standard you seem to be applying, I can't think of any opinion that would be considered rational rather than biased. It seems as if you're saying that taking any position on a question exposes your prejudices. I think that's a misuse of the word. Having an opinion is not a bias. — T Clark
I do think reaching a position involves biases that is why it is important to examine all the evidence without bias and to resort to strict logical analysis. — Andrew4Handel
examine all the evidence without bias and to resort to strict logical analysis. — Andrew4Handel
Until then, everybody is free to make preconceived beliefs about these topics. — Starthrower
I would call this jumping to conclusions. I read the synopsis quite differently. It sounds interesting and explorative in nature, inquiring into the similarities and differences of cultures which might lead to interesting new observations. As I said, we all have our own experiences (biases) and beliefs and philosophy leads one to recognize their own as well as others. — Rich
The truth is nobody knows enough about the Universe and beyond to make concrete conclusions about metaphysical things. Until then, everybody is free to make preconceived beliefs about these topics. — Starthrower
But I think that the roles of gods in morality should always be considered because that is one of the biggest sources of moral influence. It gives the impression he is going to pick and choose fairly arbitrarily from moral ideas he likes from sources he respects based on his leanings. — Andrew4Handel
Of course discussions about the nature of mind are influenced by people's metaphysical commitments. — T Clark
We are using the same words to mean different things. I like the way I'm using them. You probably like the way you are. There's nowhere for this to go. — T Clark
I don't have any metaphysical commitments I am agnostic on a lot of things admitting insufficient knowledge to draw broad conclusions. — Andrew4Handel
What I was saying about the gun debate is that peoples positions are fairly transparent. If someone defended gun ownership you would not be surprised if the owned some guns.
But in philosophy people should be rigorously examining arguments and evidence. A purely philosophical debate about gun control would be undermined if someone turned out to have a hidden cache of weapons (or had lost someone to gun violence and not revealed this.) — Andrew4Handel
you can't get away from metaphysics. You can't be agnostic. — T Clark
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