Infinite regress. If every belief has to be based on something then that needs to be based on something else that needs to be based on something else and so on forever, — Pfhorrest
fed by the rain. It is the same with beliefs — A Seagull
You will have to stop (to make dinner, to live) before resolving its own criteria. Only radical skeptic justificationists do not recognize that we find ourselves in the middle of life and already having beliefs. — Coben
If your river of beliefs can start from a spring or the rain, how do you know that the water flowing past you now isn't immediately spring water or rain water? Conversely, if you think you're at the headwaters, how do you know that there isn't further upstream you can still go? — Pfhorrest
fed by the rain. It is the same with beliefs — A Seagull
What are the axioms of belief which are free from doubt? — PuerAzaelis
a fantasy — A Seagull
Not if you think that every belief needs to be criticized. That is, the quote I have quoted. That is an utterly unrealistic demand.The difference is that critical rationalism has built into it that that is the right way to proceed. — Pfhorrest
I just don't see that, not in practice. Scientists are justificationists in general, and they must know that not all assumptions have been demonstrated and they are revisionist at least in theory.] The justificationist at least nominally says "don't believe anything at all until it's justified from the ground up".
Right but if we have that sentence I quoted as part of the system you might as well be a justificationist. You have an endless job the moment you have a single belief. If I meet a person who works with justification who says that every belief must be justified, I will 'harrass' them just as I am you. And it has happened. If I mean a critical rationalist who makes a statement like that, well, you see what happens. And this is not just me being a pedant. I have a mixed epistemology. I use intuition, justification, and critical rationalism. I decide sometimes to let things slide that may or may not be working.Critical rationalism on the other hands says you don't have to justify everything from the ground up before you're warranted to believe it. You're warranted to believe anything you want, unless you've found something that demands you reject it. — Pfhorrest
Actually you could not do this. It's the cognitive equivalent of hitting yourself with a hammer you can't even believe exists. You cannot believe the criteria of justification. You can't decide anything even to not decide. It's gibberish.That by itself is compatible with justificationism: you could question everything, and demand conclusive answers before you let yourself believe anything, rejecting all beliefs that can't be conclusively justified yet. — Pfhorrest
A sentence that does not go with the sentence I won't quote again but have four times. IT DOES NOT FIT WITH THAT SENTENCE.But my second principle, "liberalism", says not to do that: you are free (hence "liberalism") to think whatever you like, until you find reason not to. — Pfhorrest
That by itself would be compatible with fideism, e.g. a religious person would say "so I'm free to believe in God then, thanks!" — Pfhorrest
I don't think that holds. But it's another issue and we can't seem to get around that sentence.But that, obviously, would be to abandon rationalism: just "believe what you want lol no rules". — Pfhorrest
Not if you think that every belief needs to be criticized. That is, the quote I have quoted. That is an utterly unrealistic demand. — Coben
Scientists are justificationists in general — Coben
But my second principle, "liberalism", says not to do that: you are free (hence "liberalism") to think whatever you like, until you find reason not to. — Pfhorrest
A sentence that does not go with the sentence I won't quote again but have four times. IT DOES NOT FIT WITH THAT SENTENCE. — Coben
I am here, I am now, I have the appearance of certain things occurring. — PuerAzaelis
The point is that if you refuse to believe anything until it's sufficiently grounded, but at some point you can just say "this is sufficient enough" and stop looking for further grounding for that, then at any point you could do that, and you've completely thrown out the principle of refusing to believe things until they're sufficiently grounded. You're admitting that there are some things that just don't need justification, than can just be taken on faith, for no reason; or else, if you stick to the principle, you never admit any belief in anything. Justificationism either leads you to reject all beliefs or accept arbitrary beliefs, and is therefore useless as a form of rationalism. — Pfhorrest
My statement "Every guess I make is subject to change"...
...is simply a statement of a truth about myself. I am telling you point blank that anytime I make a guess...that guess is not only labelled a "guess"...it IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE.
It certainly is not a guess...any more than the statement, "My first name is Frank" is a guess.
Not sure what you are getting at? — Frank Apisa
Janus
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My statement "Every guess I make is subject to change"...
...is simply a statement of a truth about myself. I am telling you point blank that anytime I make a guess...that guess is not only labelled a "guess"...it IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE.
It certainly is not a guess...any more than the statement, "My first name is Frank" is a guess.
Not sure what you are getting at?
— Frank Apisa
Your statement expresses what you think is the truth about yourself; you could well be mistaken. Thus it is either a belief about yourself or a guess. The question is whether it is subject to revision. — Janus
I am not able to establish unshakable beliefs. Are you? — Monist
Janus
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↪Frank Apisa So according to you not every thought you have about yourself and the world is a guess? Apparently there is at least one which is not. Are there others? — Janus
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