Or the laws of nature could have suddenly changed in which case nothing would be what it had been any more. — John
But, in any case, it is a trivial point because, although we cannot be certain, we have very good reasons to believe that such a thing is not, in fact actually, as opposed to merely logically, possible. — John
Our current understanding (taken as a whole and not in regard to details) may or may not be fallible. — John
You need to make a distinction between knowing and knowing that you know. What we think of as our knowledge may indeed really be knowledge, because it may indeed reflect absolute reality, or it may not. So our knowing about our knowing is indeed uncertain, but our knowing itself may or may not be fallible. — John
Or the laws of nature could have suddenly changed in which case nothing would be what it had been any more. — John
That this might happen is not from a purely logical point of view, impossible, because it involves no purely logical contradiction. But, in any case, it is a trivial point because, although we cannot be certain, we have very good reasons to believe that such a thing is not, in fact possible. — John
That is really such a sloppy analysis. — Wayfarer
Any aspect of experience requires
So what do you think could cause this to change, i.e. that water could suddenly start boiling at a different temperature? — Metaphysician Undercover
And, if you think that it could suddenly change, how is our knowledge that water boils at 100, objective knowledge? — Metaphysician Undercover
Or do you think that all knowledge is subjective? — Metaphysician Undercover
I think it is logically impossible, because if the substance started boiling at a temperature other than 100, it would either not be water, or not be degrees celsius. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you think that it's possible that the thing which we know as "water" is not really water as we know it? — Metaphysician Undercover
If we allow that it is logically possible that the subject which is identified as "water", could be other than as it is identified (it boils at 100 and freezes at 0, etc.), we allow the logical possibility of the complete failure of all logic. Logic becomes illogical if it does not abide by its own principles. How is it not contradictory to say that it is logically possible that logic could be illogical? — Metaphysician Undercover
I'd certainly not agree with that. Ethical judgments are necessarily mental. How would we make sense out of saying that there are nonmental judgments? — Terrapin Station
No, I wasn't talking about ethical judgements, I was talking about ethical matters. Ethical matters are matters of human behaviours, human beings acting amongst others — Metaphysician Undercover
There is a difference between objective, as I have defined it, and absolute. — Sapientia
It's not I who established the Celsius scale, and the convention which holds that necessity, so it's not I who "defined it that way". You advise me to reject that convention, but you haven't justified your advice. So I take it as bad advice. If your desire is to counter that convention, with a new proposal, that it's possible for the temperature of boiling water to be other than those covered by the Celsius convention, then go ahead put forth your proposal.Of course, it necessarily will be for you, because you have defined it that way, against my advice. — Sapientia
The solution is simple: don't restrict yourself in that way. — Sapientia
Then you're not talking about ethics. You don't have ethics if you don't have judgments about behavior. — Terrapin Station
In fact we can not even say it is probable. To do that we would need to make some assumptions about regularity, which we have no ground for making. — andrewk
There's no such thing as 'conditions as close as possible'. This is fundamental and crucial. It cannot be dismissed by claims of pedantry. — andrewk
Also, I suspect that I may (perhaps for the first time?!?) agree with MU. — andrewk
If, as it seems to be, the Celsius scale is defined by a temperature of 100 being the temperature at which pure water boils at 1060 kPa then by definition, whenever pure water boils at 1060 kPa, the temperature is 100C, regardless of what a thermometer says, and regardless of what the value of 1/(dS/dE) may be. What we would learn from such an interesting development is that the Celsius scale is context-dependent, contrary to what had been previously supposed. — andrewk
Ethics is rules, a code for human behaviour. We have two things here, human behaviour, and a code of rules. Judgements about behaviour is something completely different. Judgements come when someone looks at the behaviour, and looks at the rules, making a comparison. — Metaphysician Undercover
No. What I'm referring to is such as "One shouldn't murder," or "It is wrong to murder." That is a judgment about behavior. — Terrapin Station
At any rate, whether you call that a judgment or simply a rule, there's nothing objective about it. There's no such thing as objective rules in general. — Terrapin Station
A judgement about behaviour" implies that there is a particular instance of behaviour which is being judged. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, the problem with long debates in very long threads like this is that it's very hard to get, and keep, a fix on what exactly the claim and counter-claim are. I thought 'this looks interesting' and traced it back for at least three pages and could not find a definitive statement of the respective positions, but only skirmishing on what may well have been tangential issues.Well, it was only ever meant as an example of a more general point which I have explained separately — Sapientia
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