Okay, so presumably you'd say that some ontological claims are not empirical claims, right? — Terrapin Station
I don't know if you realize it or care, by the way, but every post you type to me comes across like you're a complete asshole who is only interested in arguing. — Terrapin Station
It depends on what you mean by "ontological". — Janus
Why would say that? — Janus
The standard definition. Ontology is theory/philosophy of existence or being.
So you'd say that all ontological claims are either testable or semantic (i,e, true or false by convention or definition)? — Terrapin Station
Of course ontic claims can be interpreted to be within the epistemological domain in which case they are either testable or semantic (true or false by convention or definition; for example "Sydney is the capital of New South Wales"). — Janus
Because it's the way you come across. It's an attitude that's projected. — Terrapin Station
I didn't sat that. — Janus
I'm saying that in order to count as a claim a proposition should be either testable or logically true. — Janus
Why would a proposition count as a claim, as opposed to merely an idea that one likes, if its truth is not determinable? Claims must be supported, no? If they are neither testable nor logically true, then I can't see how they could be thought to be supportable. Are you appealing to consensus or commonsense or something like that instead? — Janus
So here's one common definition of the word "claim": "state or assert that something is the case, typically without providing evidence or proof." — Terrapin Station
OK, sure you can claim that something is the case without providing evidence or proof. But this is in the context of philosophical, not idiomatic, usage of the word. What about argument? Would you say that a claim counts as philosophical if you make it without providing either evidence, proof or argument? — Janus
I haven't said that philosophical speculations must be testable or semantic — Janus
The boundary of a particle is in no way dependent on us perceiving it. — Terrapin Station
[Sorry, the actual quote came from @Janus.]"Are the boundaries (borders) of objects real, according to you?" — Terrapin Station
The sea shore, a river or a sea does exist physically just like a mountain range. That they are a border between two states is something totally else.But surely there are also borders that exist because they lie between different things, like the sea-shore, which bounds the sea (or the land, depending which way you're oriented)? — Pattern-chaser
So would you say that there's no real edge of a cliff, say? We just invent that, so if we decided to think about it differently/invent it otherwise, we could walk 15 feet further out without falling to our deaths? — Terrapin Station
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