What does it mean to be useful if it doesn't carry some degree of accuracy?Especially the last one. I imagine the idea became popular because it proved useful — Pattern-chaser
Does every effect have a cause, or is it possible for causeless effects to happen?
I like sushi
746
↪Pattern-chaser
Does every effect have a cause, or is it possible for causeless effects to happen?
This question is irrelevant. If there is an ‘effect’ that isn’t ‘caused’ then it isn’t an ‘effect’ - — I like sushi
You say you are agnostic to all things that are unproven. Compare your position to mine: my position is that if something isn't proven, then we should be open to the possibility it is false. — Relativist
If we will only allow that, as we progress, we remain unsure, we will leave opportunities for alternatives. We will not become enthusiastic for the fact, the knowledge, the absolute truth of the day, but remain always uncertain … In order to make progress, one must leave the door to the unknown ajar. — Richard P. Feynman
I would regard as "extreme skepticism" the attitude that one could have no degree of trust in anything that is unproven (the sun might not rise tomorrow; the world external to my mind actually might not exist,...). Are you indeed extreme in that sense, or are you closer to my position - such that you acknowledge uncertainty, but accept that we can have varying degrees of confidence about many aspects of the world? — Relativist
What does it mean to be useful if it doesn't carry some degree of accuracy? — Harry Hindu
This question is irrelevant. If there is an ‘effect’ that isn’t ‘caused’ then it isn’t an ‘effect’ - that is the semantic problem. — I like sushi
if we cannot comprehend such things then what place to we have to talk of them? — I like sushi
I suggest that "to believe" means to accept or treat something as true as a psychological attitude, an attitude that influences our future behavior (including our mental behavior). As you note, we have no choice but to make guesses (i.e. form beliefs in this psychological sense), so why not make the best guesses possible?No degree of trust? No, I wouldn't go that far. I don't accept that we "can have" "varying degrees of confidence", but that's because the phraseology is not what I would've chosen. :wink: To say that we assume "varying degrees of confidence" is to describe what we actually do, in RL. Because we have no choice, in practice. But those assumptions are unjustified; they're just guesses, nothing more. But most of the time, our guesses work, so we use them. :up: — Pattern-chaser
As you note, we have no choice but to make guesses (i.e. form beliefs in this psychological sense), so why not make the best guesses possible? — Relativist
Then wouldnt you say that the usefulness of the idea of causation is evidence that the idea is accurate? — Harry Hindu
an amalgam of evidence can be considered proof — Harry Hindu
is it more reasonable to believe everything has a cause or to not believe it? — Relativist
I'm referring to every day life. Despite there being guesswork to our choices, we still endeavor to to make the best possible guesses. Imagine if you were to refrain from making your everyday choices simply because you could neither prove it optimal, nor compute the probability of your preferred outcome. That is not tenable.Like everyone else, I will continue to use unjustified guesswork in my everyday life. — Pattern-chaser
Relativist
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Like everyone else, I will continue to use unjustified guesswork in my everyday life. — Pattern-chaser
I'm referring to every day life. Despite there being guesswork to our choices, we still endeavor to to make the best possible guesses. Imagine if you were to refrain from making your everyday choices simply because you could neither prove it optimal, nor compute the probability of your preferred outcome. That is not tenable. — Relativist
Why isnt a quantity of evidence not equal to conclusive evidence? You keep avoiding the question. What would proof of causation look like if it doesnt look like what is happening right here right now - us communicating. What is communication if not a causal process? Can you reply to a post before I post it and before you read it? Is not your reply the effect of my post and you reading it?No. Only conclusive evidence constitutes proof. Quantity (of evidence) does not equal 'conclusive', as you must know well. — Pattern-chaser
Fine- call them opinions. There are still 2 important considerations that need consideration; how strongly you hold this opinion (which is a psychological state), and how strongly supported is your opinion (ideally, this entails an attempt to be objective). It seems more reasonable to have strong opinions when the support is stronger."I 'believe' aliens from other planets live among us" does not sound as good to my ear as, "It is my guess that aliens from other planets live among us"...or "it is my opinion (estimate) that..." — Frank Apisa
...is therefore identical to the set of all sets. — TheGreatArcanum
if the set of all sets in nature has ontological value, and both contains itself and does not contain itself at the same time and in the same respect, there is no contradiction. — TheGreatArcanum
How can a set contain contain itself and not contain itself at the same time? Surely that is a logical contradiction? — Devans99
Relativist
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"I 'believe' aliens from other planets live among us" does not sound as good to my ear as, "It is my guess that aliens from other planets live among us"...or "it is my opinion (estimate) that..." — Frank Apisa
Fine- call them opinions. There are still 2 important considerations that need consideration; how strongly you hold this opinion (which is a psychological state), and how strongly supported is your opinion (ideally, this entails an attempt to be objective). It seems more reasonable to have strong opinions when the support is stronger.
What I'm trying to get at is that some opinions are "better" than others - i.e. it is more reasonable to hold them. Further, it is more reasonable and rational (and more productive) to strive to hold opinions that are well supported. — Relativist
TheGreatArcanum
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doesn’t it seem absurd to presuppose that an effect can exist without a cause considering the fact that all effects are conceptually contained (I..e. subsets) within their causes? to say that an effect exists without a cause is to say that, in essence, the effect is causeless and is therefore not contained within a higher set and is therefore identical to the set of all sets. — TheGreatArcanum
Despite there being guesswork to our choices, we still endeavor to to make the best possible guesses. — Relativist
Imagine if you were to refrain from making your everyday choices simply because you could neither prove it optimal, nor compute the probability of your preferred outcome. That is not tenable. — Relativist
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