There are of course no trials or convictions, merely experiences of such. — unenlightened
There is no rubber meeting no road, merely experiences of rubber meeting experiences of road.
One ends up talking and behaving exactly as if there were facts of the matter and simply brackets everything with 'experience of' which becomes meaningless to just the extent that there is nothing that is not 'experience of'.
The problem with such radical subjectivism/phenomenology is not that it is inconsistent, but that it does no explanatory work.
How is bracketing everything with "experience of" any different to bracketing everything with "fact of the matter"? If the former leads to meaninglessness then why not the latter? Furthermore, the claim is that the experience is the fact of the matter, so one "ends up talking and behaving exactly as if there were facts of the matter" because there are facts of the matter. It's just that the facts of the matter are experiential (and subjects of discourse in the case of the unobserved) rather than something else. — Michael
And how does the alternative offer an explanation? Rather than just say "we experience X" the 'explanation' is "we experience X because something other than the experience happens". Is that really much of an explanation? Seems like a God-of-the-gaps.
And perhaps there is no explanation. Explanations must come to an end somewhere. So why not at the phenomenal? — Michael
Now, is there a truth to what happened? If no, then why does society bother trying to figure out? Why investigate, why prosecute, why convict? — Marchesk
But if there is no truth to a crime, then why the dog and pony show of having trials and convicting people? If there is no actual way in which Ms. Halbach was killed, then why do we care so much? I think we care, because this is a situation where the rubber meets the road, and we all think someone did murder her a certain way, and the jury is supposed to decide whether the prosecution showed this beyond reasonable doubt. We're all realists when it comes to murder. It's crazy to think otherwise. — Marchesk
But if there is no truth to a crime, then why the dog and pony show of having trials and convicting people? — Marchesk
In case you live under a rock, the Netflix documentary, 'Making of a Murderer', presents the trial and conviction of Steven Avery and his nephew, Brendan Dassey, for the murder of Teresa Halbach — Marchesk
But if there is no truth to a crime, then why the dog and pony show of having trials and convicting people? If there is no actual way in which Ms. Halbach was killed, then why do we care so much? — Marchesk
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