Can you set out your reasoning? — StreetlightX
If entailment cannot be achieved by negation of totality — Posty McPostface
I'm still not sure what this means. — StreetlightX
Now, my question is the following : how would you attack this argument, in a way other than denying (P2), i.e. that there exists a series of all grounded facts ? — Philarete
It's difficult for me to see what the attraction of an unrestricted PSR is — SophistiCat
How can something essentially inadequate to a task perform the task? — Dfpolis
How can something essentially inadequate to a task perform the task? — Dfpolis
Explain, please. — SophistiCat
To the argument that the facts are the things themselves, there arises the problem of just how, exactly, one comes to understand what the fact is. — tim wood
It seems to me that "fact" has two senses. One is an intelligible state of affairs. The other is a known intelligible state of affairs. That a known fact can often be expressed in text is incidental. A person who cannot speak or write can know a fact. Alternately, a fact might be so novel that there are as yet no words to express it. (Still, one might be able to indicate it in some non-verbal way, such as pointing.) — Dfpolis
Intelligible state of affairs (ISA): is this just a fact by another name? And we have ISAs and "known" ISAs? Is there a difference between them beyond the implication that mere ISAs are, apparently, not known? Just what is an unknown ISA (or fact)? — tim wood
"Intelligible" itself is a problem, here: what does it mean? — tim wood
It appears to beg-the-question as to what a fact is. — tim wood
Nor did I mean "text" in the narrow sense you seem to have taken it to mean. Broadly, what I mean is you've either got the thing itself, or a representation of the thing. — tim wood
In this sense I'm calling perception a text. — tim wood
I'm calling the representation a text, i.e., that it is not the thing itself, but represents it. — tim wood
That is, it matters how "fact" is defined. I offered above that a fact is a description, and that influences how the arguments wrt to the OP might proceed. — tim wood
I'll ask you to demonstrate exactly how you get from, "The red book is on the table," to, the red book is on the table, and vice versa. Or, same question, how you know the red book is on the table. — tim wood
Rather it is how the fact-as-text can become the fact itself — tim wood
The point of this is that in talking about facts, one has to distinguish between the thing described and the text wherein the description is homed. Confusing the two makes for confusion and bad philosophy. — tim wood
I don't disagree, but I still can't see any support for the idea that a view of the world that does not incorporate an unrestricted PSR would be logically inconsistent — andrewk
Nothing can act that is not operational
I am not familiar with that proposition. What does it mean? — andrewk
And why do you feel the absence of an unrestricted PSR is inconsistent with it? — andrewk
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.