How much of what has been written about philosophy is indubitable? — A Seagull
What would be the point of writing down what is indubitable, except as a jumping off point (like Descartes' cogito)? — SophistiCat
Logic. In practice not application. — I like sushi
Its application to words or statements is somewhat haphazard. There is no logical rigour to it. And any logical rigour in the abstract system is lost when it is applied to words.
If A is on B then B is under A
X is on drugs
Drugs is under X. — A Seagull
If A is on B then B is under A
X is on drugs
Drugs is under X. — A Seagull
You're confusing the symbol with its meaning. The "on" in the second statement doesn't mean the same as the "on" in your first, therefore the conclusion doesn't follow. It's not really about the symbols, but what the symbols mean. — Harry Hindu
Quite so, but when you apply 'mending' to logic or words you lose the rigour of the logic and it becomes indistinguishable form non-logic. — A Seagull
Quite so, but when you apply 'mending' to logic or words you lose the rigour of the logic and it becomes indistinguishable form non-logic. — A Seagull
I don't know what you mean by "mending" in this statement. — Harry Hindu
What, for you, is indubitable? — A Seagull
Notice the "for you"?
That's there because one chooses what to believe, and hence what to doubt.
Here again is the oft ignored distinction between what is true and what is believed. — Banno
Statements are combinations of nouns and verbs and such like; Some statements are either true or false, and we can call these propositions. So, "The present king of France is bald" is a statement, but not a proposition.
Beliefs range over propositions. (arguably, they might be made to range over statements: Fred believes the present king of France is bald.)
Beliefs set out a relation of a particular sort between an agent and a proposition.
This relation is such that if the agent acts in some way then there is a belief and a desire that together are sufficient to explain the agent's action. Banno wants water; he believes he can pour a glass from the tap; so he goes to the tap to pour a glass of water.
Quite so, but when you apply 'meaning' to logic or words you lose the rigour of the logic and it becomes indistinguishable form non-logic. — A Seagull
I don't know what you mean by "mending" in this statement.
— Harry Hindu
I don't know either! I think it must be a typo for 'meaning'. — A Seagull
What is the relationship between the scribble "on" and the scribble "under" if not what they mean, as in they are opposites?Quite so, but when you apply 'meaning' to logic or words you lose the rigour of the logic and it becomes indistinguishable form non-logic. — Harry Hindu
as the opposite of "under", as in the first definition I provided above.If A is on B then B is under A
X is on drugs
Drugs is under X. — A Seagull
No. IMO :smirk: philosophies - contra doxa, sophistry, dogmas - are, in effect, rationally - more than merely rhetorically - reflective (meta) heuristics (i.e. noncognitive use-claims) like e.g. musical composition, martial arts, orienteering; thereby distinct from declarative (object) algorithms (i.e. cognitive truth-claims) such as e.g. physics, mathematics, engineering, computation, medicine, etc ... including 'pseudo-sciences' (re: untestable, empirical, claims) as well.Does this mean that all the writings of Plato, Aristotle, Hume, Kant, Wittgenstein et al amount to nothing more than opinions and suggestions? — A Seagull
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