Epistemic closure thus becomes a reasonable choice. Rather than worrying that the world is "some totality of facts", facts become distinctions or individuations that could materially matter. Facts aren't definite in themselves in some realist fashion. They are simply what is "true" - or worth us knowing - to the degree that we have some reason to care.
Facts thus are always intrinsically self-interested. While also being "about the world".
It is this double-headed nature that often confuses. Realism vs idealism tries to make facticity all a thing of the world, or all a thing of the mind. But semiotics shows that "facts" are the signs by which we relate to the world. Indeed, epistemically, it is the relation that creates the self and its world.
But anyway, the way it works is that syntax gives you your referential openness and semantics gives you your referential boundedness. Together, they compose an epistemic system. — apokris
The essence of interpretation is creation. All that is created is created within the limits of the creating. — tim wood
I know that 2+2 = (is) 4, and that the stone on my desk just is a stone.
The only way to reconcile this knowledge (that I take as certain) with its essential createdness is to suppose that as knowledge it comes into being - is created - when I think of it. — tim wood
what it seems to say: that there is such a thing as interpretive knowledge — tim wood
a Socratic intuition about the difference between belief and knowledge. Beliefs, doxai, are deficient cognitive attitudes. In believing something, one accepts some content as true without knowing that it is true; one holds something to be true that could turn out to be false. Since our actions reflect what we hold to be true, holding beliefs is potentially harmful for oneself and others. Accordingly, beliefs are ethically worrisome and even, in the words of Plato’s Socrates, “shameful.” As I argue, this is a serious philosophical proposal.
What would be key to the Peircean semiotic view I'm expressing is that interpretations actually have to live in the world. — apokrisis
It all goes back to Kant, IMO. — Wayfarer
But in any case, aside from pragmatism and concern with what works, there's the issue of knowledge of the good, the true, from a perspective other than the pragmatic - something to set the moral compass against. — Wayfarer
The CCP sure would like that. — Wayfarer
Do you argue that it's the world we live in? Or the created world of reality? The distinction being that if it's reality, then knowledge - interpretations that work in reality - are never quite about the world. That would leave a troublesome gap. I buy Heidegger, in that I think we're already in the world, and that would eliminate the gap. But Heidegger's is the world we're (always already) thrown into and thus neither solves, resolves nor dissolves Kant's gap between the perceived world and the world in itself. Which is fundamental? I think Heidegger's has temporal priority, but Kant's is logical priority. I can say, "this is a hammer!" But Kant's question as to how I know it is a hammer, with the corollary that I can't know, is still there. If I understand your posts, you argue that Peirce does resolve this. Peirce's does indeed seem to be an account that works and makes sense, but the Kantian question seems still to endure. Kant a priori, Peirce a posteriori.What would be key to the Peircean semiotic view I'm expressing is that interpretations actually have to live in the world. So they are not free creations ... in the long run at least. To survive, they must prove themselves useful habits. They must stabilise a working relationship that is then defined as being about a self in a world. — apokrisis
This moves towards a radical (imo) destruction of "knowledge" as a term meaningful in itself, or at least away from any naive idea of knowledge I might have had.So we have actually constructed a deep conflict in which there are two paths to true knowledge, it appears. But again, the pragmatist will point out that we, as humans, are still having to give priority to actually having to live in the real world.... [k]nowing is about acting, and all that results from having acted. So both the objective and the subjective extremes are going to be "found out" in practice.
The habits that survive that test are the habits that did in some sense work. The selfhood that resulted was one adapted to "its" world. Knowledge wasn't either found or created in the process. But a state of knowing - a state of interpretance - could be observed to persist in a self-sustaining fashion. It did the job. — apokrisis
Do you argue that it's the world we live in? Or the created world of reality? — tim wood
The distinction being that if it's reality, then knowledge - interpretations that work in reality - are never quite about the world. That would leave a troublesome gap. — tim wood
I buy Heidegger, in that I think we're already in the world, and that would eliminate the gap. — tim wood
But Kant's question as to how I know it is a hammer, with the corollary that I can't know, is still there. — tim wood
Peirce's does indeed seem to be an account that works and makes sense, but the Kantian question seems still to endure. — tim wood
This moves towards a radical (imo) destruction of "knowledge" as a term meaningful in itself, or at least away from any naive idea of knowledge I might have had.
I cannot rid myself of is the notion of bias in the form of the presuppositions that necessarily are part of the building materials of "interpretance." Or in short, that such is just an obscuring accommodation that happens to work — tim wood
So where is your yearning for absolute certainty coming from? Why is relative sureness not enough? Why is the standard human ability to operate on partial and uncertain information not in fact a huge advantage? — apokrisis
But in any case, aside from pragmatism and concern with what works, there's the issue of knowledge of the good, the true, from a perspective other than the pragmatic - something to set the moral compass against. — Wayfarer
From any moral stand, this just is not true. — tim wood
I know that 2+2 = (is) 4, and that the stone on my desk just is a stone. — tim wood
You use "psychology" or variant six times. — tim wood
Pragmatism, as I read your posts, is a model, an explanation. And it works. But at a price. You seem to surrender whatever must be surrendered in favour of pragmatism. — tim wood
I'm absolutely certain that with respect to certain axioms, that 2+2=4, and more besides. It's all a giant if-then, but within the if-then we can have our certainty. — tim wood
I suppose you could argue that pragmatically, it is useful to treat all people as equal before the law. — Wayfarer
I'm not saying I agree with them, but what are the grounds for saying they're wrong? — Wayfarer
This was in response to Tim Wood invoking 'any moral stand'. I'm trying to show that the moral stand which he's assuming was actually derived from Christian philosophy. — Wayfarer
By being a human being. Do I really have to expand on this? — tim wood
The proposition I have in mind is that there are conceivable acts that every person would say was wrong. Given this, relativism disappears. Deny this and everything is right. Can you construct it differently? — tim wood
Not far from where I live the WW2 battleship Massachusetts is moored. There's a quantum possibility it will appear complete in my driveway. Is that the uncertainty that grounds your apparent abandonment of the possibility of any real certainty? — tim wood
Indeed, at that level, but by the time you get up to molecules, much less coffee cups and battleships, pretty much everything behaves. Btw, if the battleship does teleport, it won't be a miracle, just extremely unlikely.My reading of 'uncertainty' is NOT that battleships will miraculously teleport, but that when you drill down to the so-called 'fundamental constituents of matter', then they are found to be surprisingly indeterminate. — Wayfarer
Not a very elaborate or sophisticated philosophy perhaps, but one in which relativism bites granite.The fact that 'everyone knows [insert heinous act] is wrong' does not constitute an ethical philosophy. — Wayfarer
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