Yes, but you have to be careful here. It is possible to offer verification within a given system, but that verification is bound to be circular. For example, the standard for determining whether it's a matter of habit or practice is to look at twin studies, feral children studies, isolated cultures, etc. and see what happens in cases where people don't get the practice or habit required for learning. How have we arrived at this standard? It is through habit and practice, which has shown us that to verify this, we must resort to looking at such particular cases as we have established.Is it a matter of practice and habit? We can test that with twin studies, feral child studies, isolated cultures, anthropology etc.. The answer's definitely not there yet, but it's a verifiable statement. — Pseudonym
We would expect the underlying conceptual structure to be similar, not necessarily the words used.Do metaphysical statements describe underlying realities? If they do we'd expect them to be remarkably similar. If we had a theory that they did, one way to verify that theory would be to see if they were indeed similar across cultures. — Pseudonym
Things are locally verifiable, with reference to other things. Much like Wittgenstein's hinge propositions. You may be able to derive one first principle with reference to other first principles. But the enterprise is circular, because you can equally travel in the other direction.We have gone directly from requiring a verifiable definition of utility to making verifiable statements about why its meaning should be so universal. At no point so far have we had to rely on a non verifiable statements of fact to derive our meaningful propositions. — Pseudonym
We can know it in a deeper sense than the merely pragmatic, but we need to tie it in to the theoretical (ie, why a confluence of logic and truth would lead to people believing in the confluence of logic and truth)."all people seem to act as if they believe in the confluence of logic and truth" is a verifiable statement. From that we can theorise in a pragmatic sense, that there is a confluence of logic and truth. We cannot know this of course, but it is a verifiable theory. — Pseudonym
if metaphysical statements about metaphysics are to be analysed by their own conclusions then every such statement becomes meaningless. — Pseudonym
Without prejudice, it remains a possibility that science is actually investigating all there is to be investigated.
You can no more disprove a presumption of physicalism than you can prove one.
Of course an unverifiable, unfalsifiable brute-fact can't be disproved. That doesn't make it of interest or value. — Michael Ossipoff
.Of course an unverifiable, unfalsifiable brute-fact can't be disproved. That doesn't make it of interest or value.
.Except it is the default position
.…of the mind that has rid itself of superstitious reifications.
.That's why people are naturally naive realists.
.I like the old Zen saying " Before I practiced Zen mountains were mountains and rivers were rivers, when I began practicing mountains were no longer mountains and rivers no longer rivers, and when I gained enlightenment mountains were again mountains and rivers again rivers". (Paraphrased)
.The philosophically reflective person just takes physical objects to be physical objects made of 'stuff'. When she begins to study philosophy she thinks they are illusions of. or constituted by, the mind
.…in one of the countless elaborate ways that have been devised by philosophers. When she returns to realism and materialism it will not be a naive realism and materialism, though. It will be a realism and materialism that incorporates, and makes corporeal, both mind and spirit.
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