You're a bit boring - to me - to be an expert. — creativesoul
A keen eye for using certain fallacious means at the appropriate time. — creativesoul
Your participation on this forum could be the one activity that keeps you thinking positively about yourself. I mean, some folk find picking on other people to be an acceptable worthwhile ability/habit/personality trait.
Now, you're attempting to use the notion of "expert" as a means of what... exactly? Self comfort?
:kiss: — creativesoul
A means of devaluing another person's thoughts on a matter... God notwithstanding...
Appeal to authority is wrong for very good Reason. — creativesoul
You're a bit boring - to me - to be an expert.
— creativesoul
On what planet is that the test of whether someone is an expert? — Bartricks
The same one where it makes sense to ask such a stupid question. — creativesoul
↪creativesoulThe same one where it makes sense to ask such a stupid question. — creativesoul
So, as you clearly think it doesn't make senes to ask that question on 'this' planet, you admit that the 'is this person interesting to creativesoul' test is not the test of expertise here. Yes? — Bartricks
How do we know when the experts have been wrong? — creativesoul
You ask the experts. — Bartricks
As I said... you're a bit boring to have several years of graduate level philosophy. — creativesoul
What about all the time that passes prior to their becoming aware of that fact? — creativesoul
Are you a psychologist? Hope not, because your analysis is rubbish. — Bartricks
You are claiming that our path to knowing when the experts have been wrong is to ask them.
Is that correct? — creativesoul
It's not quite as simple as that, but the details would bore you — Bartricks
Well, you likely have yourself, consciously or unconsciously or both, set up a bunch of heuristics. And your solution might or might not work fairly well for you but not be right for your neighbor. Intuition has to play a strong role in those heuristics. When you decide to ask for second opinions? When you choose to doubt consensus amongst experts and do some reseach? how to choose between opposing experts - and there are almost always opposing experts, from mainstreat to fringe? how much you decide other factors - monetary compensation, paradigmatic biases, tradition, etc. - are affecting or may be affecting expert positions? And what you do when you have doubt. These all end up being approaches to a no answer is perfect and certainly not everyone approach to dealing with fallibility. And different people have different optimal solutions, since they differ in intelligence, lay knowledge of different fields, vocabulary (reading justifications and evidence), confidence, available time and more.Now what? — creativesoul
How do we know when the experts have been wrong? — creativesoul
I don't think you do. It is surely sufficient for a non-expert to have reason to believe there is a proof of the existence of a god that an expert has said so, especially when the proof in question has not yet been assessed by other experts. — Bartricks
But those experts were basing their opinion on other proofs than the one in question. Either their proofs were faulty or these should have convinced other experts that the proof had been found. Of course this leaves room for other proofs to be the case, but it doesn't apply to my needing to believe one modern expert in regard to his or her proof.Coben
I could follow your expert opinion that today's experts are not the right ones, but then other experts will have a different take on that.
— Coben
But I don't think any expert in metaphysics would deny that, historically, most expert metaphysicians - including most of the undisputed best - have thought that God's existence could either be proved or shown to be overall more reasonable than not. — Bartricks
The point, though, is that for non-experts the fact that the majority of great metaphysicians have judged God's existence either to be rationally demonstrable, or to be more reasonable than not, provides them with good reason to suppose that this is in fact the case, — Bartricks
As I said in the other response, I don't think these kinds of experts dealing with concrete objects with real work direct consequences are in the same kind of expertise type. Further the closer parallel would be if one expert in the room says, I have come up with a new test for authenticity. I am the only one who has this test. It takes a while for others to evaluate it. Me, I am wondering why it doesn't have a coalition in favor of it. OK, the expert finished that diamond test protocol yesterday. Fine, I'll check in in a while. First I have no need to take it seriously now. If I was on a plane that is going to crash and there is one parachute expert and he is telling me how to put on, for example, the last remaining chute, which like his, is broken, so that it will work. Well, absolutely. I will take that expert deathly seriously. I have no other option. And his skill set makes it more likely than mine, for sure. But a metaphysical expert telling me he as a proof and thinks I should take it seriously, whatever that means, makes me wonder why he himself is not interested to see how other experts react. Individuals have tremendous motivation to view their creations as right. Hence peer revies type processes in most fields. I don't really need to do anything.Say you are in some kind of a diamond hall and the diamond experts are sat at their tables sifting through piles of diamonds and paste fakes, putting diamonds in one pile on their respective desks and paste fakes in the other.
You go up to one of these tables. There is a pile on the left marked 'diamonds' and a pile on the right marked 'paste'. Stones have been put in these respective piles by one expert - the expert sat at this particular desk. So no other expert apart from this one has inspected these stones. And it is also well known that diamond experts do sometimes - though far more rarely than any non-expert would - mistake a paste diamond for the real deal. Nevertheless, as a non-expert yourself you surely have very good reason to think that a stone taken from the pile marked 'diamonds' will be a diamonds and not paste? And that's the case no matter whose table you go to. — Bartricks
I would wonder why there wasn't a crowd about that proof.Do you have reason to think that the piece of paper in the pile marked 'proof of God' in the tray on that one metaphysician's table is a proof of God? — Bartricks
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