I meant to say, the set of facts that explain, and only explain, the set of facts that aren't self-explanatory.I fail to see why the set of facts that explain the set of facts that aren't self-explanatory can't include a self-explanatory fact. — Dfpolis
I agree.As for the Barber Paradox as you have stated it, there is nothing to prevent someone from shaving all who do not shave themselves and shaving himself. If you want the premise to be the Barber shaves all the beards of those who do not save themselves and only those beards, that premise is provably false. — Dfpolis
I meant to say, the set of facts that explain, and only explain, the set of facts that aren't self-explanatory. — Purple Pond
If you allow brute facts you reject the PSR and with it the logical foundations of science. — Dfpolis
You might well reject the PSR as a metaphysical principle (as most scientists do) while still doing as Hume suggested and retain it as an Epistemic principle. — MindForged
It seems like you want to hold onto the PSR when that is the very contention that I am attempting to dismantle. — Purple Pond
Putting aside your unsupported sociological claim, yes, some people are quite irrational. How can we know there is a sufficient reason if there is no sufficient reason to know? — Dfpolis
What a whomping non sequitur. The inability to know something does not entail there is no sufficient reason for something being the case. — MindForged
You might well reject the PSR as a metaphysical principle ... while still ... retain[ing] it as an Epistemic principle. — MindForged
I think you have it backward. My claim is that that if there is no sufficient reason in reality, we cannot know that there is a sufficient reason. This was in response to your suggestion: — Dfpolis
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