Deleted User
Michael
Right, but I wouldn't be saying that i know it's raining outside, but believe otherwise! — Marchesk
Deleted User
Michael
While it's true that MacIntosh is saying something true, he's asserting something unknown to him. That's why it's absurd. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Deleted User
You had pancakes for breakfast today. — Michael
Deleted User
Why is it absurd for me to say something true about myself?” — Wheatley
Frank Apisa
Dawnstorm
As you say, it's a silly statement, but also a true statement. That's the puzzle. — Michael
Pfhorrest
It is akin to shouting in a rage "I'M NOT ANGRY!". There is nothing self-contradictory in the content impressed, in either case — it's possible for someone to be non-angry, and it's possible for someone to disbelieve a truth — but just as the raged shouting expresses anger in contradiction to the impressed claim of non-anger, the utterance "X is true" implicitly expresses belief in X, and so contradicts the attendant impression of disbelief. — Pfhorrest
Michael
It would be absurd for you to make that assertion if you didn't believe I had pancakes for breakfast. There would be absolutely no reason to say it. Hence, absurd. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Deleted User
Why do I need a reason to say something? — Michael
Michael
You don't "need" a reason to say a thing. You "have" a reason to say a thing.
You said "you had pancakes for breakfast today" because you thought it would support your argument.
Name one thing you've said without a reason for saying it. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Deleted User
Deleted User
You're the one who said "It would be absurd for you to make that assertion if you didn't believe I had pancakes for breakfast. There would be absolutely no reason to say it." — Michael
Deleted User
Do you agree with the below?So where's the absurdity? — Michael
Michael
Do you agree with the below?
It's absurd to assert something true without evidence while holding a belief to the contrary. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Pfhorrest
if we assume a speaker is being honest and not manipulative, we assume an impression from them upon our minds to imply also an expression of their own mind. That is to say, when they impress upon us that X is true, if we assume that they are honest, we take that to also express their own belief that X is true. If they then impress upon us that they don't believe X is true, that impression contradicts the preceding implied expression of their belief. — Pfhorrest
Deleted User
No.
Perhaps I'm ashamed of my virginity and tell my friends that I've had sex before. People lie all the time. — Michael
Michael
This seems muddled.
Reread my statement.
"without evidence" — ZzzoneiroCosm
Snakes Alive
Deleted User
Perhaps I'm ashamed of my virginity and tell my friends that I've had sex before. People lie all the time. — Michael
Michael
Asserting something commits the speaker to believing in the content of the assertion. — Snakes Alive
You're not asserting something true without evidence. You're asserting something false. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Deleted User
Michael
I was just pointing out that your example doesn't jive with my statement. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Snakes Alive
So when I lie I commit to believing my lie? — Michael
Olivier5
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