Wheatley         
         
Marchesk         
         Are you sure McGillicuddy doesn't know it is raining? I don't think that is clear. — Wheatley
Marchesk         
         As G.E. Moore put it, “Why is it absurd for me to say something true about myself?” — Wheatley
Wheatley         
         I think there's a slight of hand here: First it asks you why the sentence is absurd, then it asks you why something that you do is absurd.Thus your friend McGillicuddy, who knows your situation, can say truly of you, “It’s raining, but MacIntosh doesn’t believe it is.” But if you, MacIntosh, were to say exactly the same thing to McGillicuddy—“It’s raining, but I don’t believe it is”—your friend would rightly think you’d lost your mind. Why, then, is the second sentence absurd? As G.E. Moore put it, “Why is it absurd for me to say something true about myself?” — Wheatley
Marchesk         
         That's where science comes in. Scientists don't have much patients for philosophical wordplay, they rather have you do an experiment. — Wheatley
Benj96         
         
Michael         
         It's true that MacIntosh doesn't believe it's raining, but that's because they don't know it's raining. So there's no reason for MacIntosh to make such a silly statement. — Marchesk
“It’s raining, but I don’t believe it is”—your friend would rightly think you’d lost your mind. Why, then, is the second sentence absurd? As G.E. Moore put it, “Why is it absurd for me to say something true about myself?” — Wheatley
Pfhorrest         
         
Deleted User         
         But if you, MacIntosh, were to say exactly the same thing to McGillicuddy—“It’s raining, but I don’t believe it is”—your friend would rightly think you’d lost your mind. — Wheatley
Wheatley         
         Read carefully.Nowhere in the anecdote does it say MacIntosh knows that it's raining. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Deleted User         
         makes clear that Macintosh doesn’t know. — Wheatley
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