history and experience shows us that what is more persuasive is not always more accurate or more true. — VagabondSpectre
This seems to make quite an epistemic leap from the evidence. What we have from history is that - what was more persuasive in the past does not always continue to be most persuasive contemperaneously. Which is most 'true' requires substantiation through one or other epistemic truth theory. — Isaac
Reason and evidence based persuasion takes much more time, and is much more reliable than the results of fast and loose conclusions. — VagabondSpectre
But darn... the obnoxious things always grab the attention. — 0 thru 9
philosophy has demanding standards about the method of persuasion it prefers to use. It requires that something be persuasive for rational, logical, or otherwise evidence based reasons — VagabondSpectre
↪Pattern-chaser
My mentor, Dfpolis - a contributor here, showed me this. Said he was the only one teaching from it on the internet. The book is out of print. Intentional Logic by Henry Veatch discusses the nature of logic from an Aristotelian perspective, contrasted with the analytic approach of Russell, Frege, Quine, and others. It argues that logical concepts are tools of knowledge that enable us to know the real world, independent of our consciousness … — Daniel Cox
it contrasts Aristotelian intentional logic with modern analytic philosophy — Daniel Cox
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