Notice I quoted twice where the word "hope" was used. That we "hope" there is such an ascertainable truth indicates that we are uncertain as to whether there is. — Metaphysician Undercover
Science may have held this absolute presupposition, but modern physics forced scientists to reevaluate it, at least for the very small. Not sure whether that supports what you're saying about presuppositions equating to an uncertainty, but developments have lead people to question their presuppositions. — Marchesk
In sum, to date, every thing you have written about absolute presuppositions has been plain wrong. — tim wood
As I understand it. according to Collingwood absolute presuppositions are the fundamental principles upon which the fields of human inquiry depend. They are understood to be different than propositions in that it is inappropriate to speak about them in terms of truth and falsity. — Janus
In sum, to date, every thing you have written about absolute presuppositions has been plain wrong. — tim wood
No, the point is that we assume there is an ascertainable truth; we don't take an attitude of uncertainty, because that would be crippling to our investigations. — Janus
So, for example, in the case of assuming that every event has a cause, which enables scientific investigation, we can fully acknowledge that the truth of this assumption could never be ascertained, and yet proceed on the assumption that every event has a cause merely for the sake of seeing what our investigations then lead us to discover. — Janus
However, as time passes and knowledge evolves, the descriptions and definitions change as well, such that what was once a self-evident truth may no longer be a self-evident truth. The fact that what was once a self-evident truth, is no longer a self-evident truth, so that its truth or falsity can no longer be ascertained, doesn't qualify it for the what is called an "absolute presupposition". The absolute presupposition is supposed to be neither true nor false at the time it is supposed, yet the self-evident truth is supposed to be true. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course we must be uncertain about what we will find when we investigate, but we cannot investigate without assuming that nature is invariant, if not deterministically, than at least statistically, and that things have been caused to be the way they are observed to be. — Janus
We are not uncertain about invariance and causality, even though we know they cannot be proven; they are not what is in question at all in any scientific investigation, instead they are indispensable assumptions. — Janus
If something were once really a "self-evident truth" then it could never fail to be true forever. — Janus
The latter are not taken to be true and should not be thought about in terms of truth and falsity; the avoidance of thinking about them in terms of truth and falsity is the way to avoid the absurdity involved in the idea of self-evident truths that could later cease to be self-evident truths. — Janus
What am I missing? — Metaphysician Undercover
If you claim that we are not uncertain about invariance, then why can't we call it truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
A self-evident truth is dependent on the meaning of the terms, definitions. These things change over time. Therefore what was once a self evident truth is not always a self-evident truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
The fact that what was once a self-evident truth later ceased to be a self-evident truth is not at all absurd, it's just a reflection of the temporal nature of reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
The absurdity is your description of absolute presuppositions, as something you are certain of, but you cannot claim to be true. That this is absurd is self-evident. — Metaphysician Undercover
The third alternative that you are missing is that we think it is inappropriate to speak about it being true or not, because it is undecidable. — Janus
This seems to be nothing more than sophistry. — Janus
Can you offer up an example for analysis? — Janus
I haven't said that we are certain of absolute presuppositions at all, or uncertain about them, but that we assume them for the sake of scientific investigation. — Janus
I'll try one last time to help you to understand the point. Returning to the example of causation; it seems to us that the events we observe have causes, but we also know we cannot prove that all (or even any) events actually do have causes; so, why would we need to claim that it is true that all events must have causes, rather than merely assuming that they do in order to enable our investigations? — Janus
You need to show what practical advantage it would lend to our investigative abilities to claim that it is true that all events must have causes, rather than merely proceeding on the provisional assumption that they do, if you want to convince me that your harping on this point is not merely pedantic carping. — Janus
Coin that, you've just designed the worst possible insult.Your techniques are those of a Trump. — tim wood
Your remarks on the topic in the face of repeated references and descriptions is not reasoned argument, rather it is a form of badger-like viciousness. — tim wood
↪tim wood
How low can you go?
Your techniques are those of a Trump.
— tim wood
Coin that, you've just designed the worst possible insult.
Let me be succinct. To describe a proposition, assumption, or presupposition, as neither true nor false is to violate the law of excluded middle. Any description which violates the law of excluded middle is illogical. Therefore the description of "absolute presuppositions", which describes these as neither true nor false is illogical.
Your remarks on the topic in the face of repeated references and descriptions is not reasoned argument, rather it is a form of badger-like viciousness.
— tim wood
If, to point out that one's position is illogical is to be vicious, then you are correct to accuse me of viciousness. — Metaphysician Undercover
Make clear that you have researched absolute presuppositions to the point where you can exhibit that understanding and make clear that you understand what they are. Then argue them, up or down, either way. Until you do, what you write is error and misleading: you dis-serve everyone who reads your posts. That is, put up or shut — tim wood
Then I'm sorry to say you have not learned from it.I've seen enough information about absolute presuppositions to know that the description of them places them into the category of uncertainties. — Metaphysician Undercover
Similarly, you can if you want "transliterate" absolute presupposition into proposition. Then you can say whatever you want about the proposition. — tim wood
Why not just try to understand them for what they are? If you want to call them "uncertain," I suppose ultimately you can. But since that designation is irrelevant, then why not call them also bing cherries or horse chestnuts? — tim wood
Why not just try to understand them for what they are? — tim wood
But I wouldn't ask if the explosion had a cause - that I would take for granted; that would be for me an absolute presupposition; that would be my ground, my logical starting point. — tim wood
Is it "uncertain" that everything that happens has a cause? You answer. And whatever you answer, it is irrelevant to the fact that for me it is an absolute presupposition of my beliefs about the explosion. — tim wood
In the same way all endeavor rests on absolute presuppositions. To be sure, ancient ones might sound ridiculous to you and me. But it would be a mistake to dismiss them, because they were the foundation for the machinery that got that work done. And we all everyone at every level have them now. But they're hard to ferret out. Some are obvious (hidden in plain sight, as it were): God, for Christians; Allah, for Muslims; none of the above, for atheists. Unlike most APs, these are often made explicit and questioned. But most APs lurk in the background. — tim wood
Perhaps you don't think the notion that everything that happens has a cause is a supposition. — tim wood
I thought this thread was in general philosophy; how did it get into the lounge - or is that where it always was? — tim wood
The form of your argument here is that you say they're a or b or c. You have determined they're neither a nor b, therefore they must be c. Petitio Principii, false alternatives, don't waste my time.so I conclude we describe them in terms of uncertainty. — Metaphysician Undercover
No one (that I know of) has claimed anything of the kind. If i were to claim anything, it would be that anyone engaged in any enterprise including science holds some ideas/notions/understandings as absolutely presupposed in his or her thinking.You have claimed that absolute presuppositions are fundamental to science. — Metaphysician Undercover
You simply don't get it, do you. You really, really want that AP to be a proposition so that you can critique it in your own way in your own terms. First: your claim as to the relevance of "certainty" is itself irrelevant. The question is not whether some AP is true; the question is, did some group of people at some time hold it as an AP (and what can be learned from that). Some cannibals believe in the benefits of eating the enemy soldier they killed. Were you at a convention of anthropologists arguing that such a thing were nonsense and "uncertain," I don't think they would indulge you for any great length of time. Likely they would simply explain to you that you clearly had no idea what they were about, and to that degree, no clue as to what you were yourself doing.Therefore whether they are certain or uncertain is extremely relevant. It's .nonsense to point out the foundational elements of epistemology and then claim that it's irrelevant whether they are certainties or uncertainties. — Metaphysician Undercover
You see - likely you don't - that you have created your own world of understanding within which you're operating. The only trouble is that you're not understanding your object as it is for what it is, but instead as you take them to be to serve your own purpose. If this, if that, if those, then conclusion. The trouble is that your ifs are no good and the argument doesn't follow.As fundamental to epistemology, clearly it is relevant whether we are certain about them or not. — Metaphysician Undercover
You're exactly not. For some reason you insist they are something other than what they are, that you want them to be, so that you can create useless arguments and useless and false conclusions.Why not just try to understand them for what they are?
— tim wood
That's exactly what I am trying to do, understand them for what they are. They are said to be fundamental to science, yet truth and falsehood is irrelevant to them. From the former I conclude that they play a key role in epistemology, and from the latter I conclude that we have no certainty concerning them.
No. It seems to me that one aspect of understanding what an AP is, is that once understood, one is free forever from the notion that there is only one way of doing or thinking about anything. There is no "right" way. History shows that some ways are better than other ways - for our purposes. From "intuition" I infer a movement toward "certainty," even if understood as as only provisional certainy, certainty "on the way" so to speak. But this certainty of which you write - what, exactly, is that? Isn't the existence of that "certainty" a presupposition of your thinking?But I wouldn't ask if the explosion had a cause - that I would take for granted; that would be for me an absolute presupposition; that would be my ground, my logical starting point.
— tim wood
I would call this an intuition.
Sure, ok. and perhaps also in relation to the knitting of Guernsey sweaters?who is analyzing it in relation to epistemology, the degree of certainty of the absolute presupposition is extremely relevant.
Why not? Truth and justification are quite distinct, after all; they are independent of each other. — Banno
The trouble with a presupposition's not being true is that it could not then be used to make any deductions - if it is not true, nothing true could follow from it. — Banno
No, that's not the form of my argument at all. There is no third option. My argument is that there are two options, A and B, where B is opposed to A. Thoughts may be described in terms of certainty or uncertainty. Thoughts which are certain, such as those expressed by propositions, are described by the terms of certainty, which are "true" and "false". Absolute presuppositions are not described in terms of certainty, therefore they are uncertain thoughts. — Metaphysician Undercover
But if you want to say that absolute presuppositions are uncertain in the sense that they might turn out to be true or false, then I would disagree, because 'undecidable' means that they cannot, even in principle turn out to be true or false — Janus
We are certain of their undecidablility, because they are things which cannot be either empirically or logically confirmed. — Janus
If it's as per the quote you gave me from Peirce, "we hope that there is some ascertainable truth", then the belief that "they cannot, even in principle turn out to be true or false", would constitute contradictory beliefs. — Metaphysician Undercover
I really don't think that this is the case with absolute presuppositions. I think the hope is there, that they will be decisively proven at some future time. That's my opinion. However, having the nature of uncertainty, one person's attitude toward an absolute presupposition might be different from another's. So some people who hold a particular absolute presupposition, might have hope that it could be decided in the future, while others might believe it is impossible for it to be decided ever. — Metaphysician Undercover
I really don't think that this is the case with absolute presuppositions. I think the hope is there, that they will be decisively proven at some future time. That's my opinion. However, having the nature of uncertainty, one person's attitude toward an absolute presupposition might be different from another's. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think Peirce, as a good scientist, allows for the possibility, and even hope, that what is understood to be possible in principle in the future may not be the same as it is understood now. So I see no contradiction there. — Janus
As it stands now, though, we can only see two ways in which propositions can be confirmed, the one certain and the other forever uncertain, in the final analysis. — Janus
So deductively logical confirmation is certain, because it is dealing with tautologies, with the fact that true premises must, deductively speaking, yield true conclusions. Inductively logical confirmation is uncertain, or only relatively certain, insofar as it is a matter of empirical observation and is always contingent upon empirically observable events and matters of fact. — Janus
So, the idea that every event has a cause is neither logically nor empirically confirmable, and hence is undecidable in principle. — Janus
So, we can say that the idea is epistemologically necessary... — Janus
I accept your correction and criticism (I actually appreciate it!) I think you're right maybe except for a small point. The metaphysical analysis that's supposed to identify APs is according to the author an historical science. I understand that to mean that he, the historical scientist, aka metaphysical analyst or just analyst, after suitable research, publishes a statement to the effect that this bunch of folks held such-an-such as an AP during that period of history. As such, it is a fact supported by research - or overturned by subsequent research as you suggest is possible. If true and accurate, then that bunch of folks actually did hold such an AP and presuppose it in their endeavors.Surely one of the things it is reasonable to take away from Collingwood is that some presumptions which seem to be absolute presuppositions turn out, on analysis, to be either relative presuppositions, or not to be presuppositions at all, but propositions. That is, surely the point of analysing them? — Pseudonym
What do you mean no contradiction? — Metaphysician Undercover
Propositions are confirmed as either true or false. They cannot be confirmed as "forever uncertain". That's nonsense which you are making up. — Metaphysician Undercover
Deductive logic alone cannot produce certainty because it cannot confirm the truth or falsity of its premises, and it requires premises. — Metaphysician Undercover
because you deny the possibility of certainty. — Metaphysician Undercover
That particular "absolute presupposition", if it is true that such are required for investigation, is responsible for some particular investigations, but from another "absolute presupposition", other investigations follow. So that particular "absolute presupposition" is not necessary. — Metaphysician Undercover
The alchemist, trying to turn tin into gold, or whatever, makes any number of relative presuppositions. But what does he absolutely presuppose? That there exists a method, which he intends to find, of accomplishing his goal of turning tin into gold. — tim wood
The cannibal eats the enemy he just killed because he absolutely presupposes he's better off for doing it, and worse off for not. — tim wood
The witch doctor sacrifices virgins to the volcano god because he absolutely supposes that his efforts will mean fewer volcanic eruptions. — tim wood
The significance of the relative presupposition, then, has nothing to do with its being true (the car is in the lot where I think it is) or false (the car is not in fact there); rather it has to do with its efficacy in facilitating my thinking. — tim wood
Any natural scientist absolutely presupposes one god - monotheism. That is, the world is absolutely presupposed to operate under one set of rules and not many sets of irreconcilable rules, and that the one set is valid both here and there. (And because the presupposed god is perfect, the nature of his creation is absolutely presupposed to be comprehensible within the bounds of scientific thinking). That is, "[N]atural scientists standing in the Greek tradition absolutely presuppose in all their inquiries
1. That there is a world of nature....
2. That this world of nature is a world of events....
3. That throughout this world there is one set of laws according to which all movements or events, in spite of all differences, agree in happening; and that consequently there is one science of this world.
4....." (222-223). — tim wood
Surely one of the things it is reasonable to take away from Collingwood is that some presumptions which seem to be absolute presuppositions turn out, on analysis, to be either relative presuppositions, or not to be presuppositions at all, but propositions. That is, surely the point of analysing them? — Pseudonym
There is no contradiction involved in saying that what seems impossible in principle now my not seem so in the future; in other words there may appear a foreseeable way to answer questions about which there is presently no foreseeable way to answer. — Janus
However, then the absolute presupposition may take the form of a proposition which may or may not be proven to be true or false, in the future. And that's what we're trying to avoid. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, then the absolute presupposition may take the form of a proposition which may or may not be proven to be true or false, in the future. And that's what we're trying to avoid. — Metaphysician Undercover
The metaphysical analysis that's supposed to identify APs is according to the author an historical science. I understand that to mean that he, the historical scientist, aka metaphysical analyst or just analyst, after suitable research, publishes a statement to the effect that this bunch of folks held such-an-such as an AP during that period of history. As such, it is a fact supported by research - or overturned by subsequent research as you suggest is possible. If true and accurate, then that bunch of folks actually did hold such an AP and presuppose it in their endeavors.
Likely most APs, once identified, and especially if ancient, likely don't cut it in modern science, or politics, or religion, or whatever. But this doesn't touch them as APs. Rather it evaluates them as current propositions. — tim wood
The push to regard APs as ordinary propositions is strong and naturally so. One form of innoculation against the pressure is to remember that the AP is always (formally) a statement about what some person or group of people in fact did. — tim wood
Surely one of the things it is reasonable to take away from Collingwood is that some presumptions which seem to be absolute presuppositions turn out, on analysis, to be either relative presuppositions, or not to be presuppositions at all, but propositions. That is, surely the point of analysing them? — Pseudonym
Yes, this is where I'm trying to get. How are we going to distinguish an absolute presupposition from a relative presupposition? According to tim woods' description, there is a substantial difference between these two, so there must be some defining principles which we could identify within presuppositions to distinguish them, if the various presuppositions are described properly. — Metaphysician Undercover
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