If it is metaphysically possible for there to be such things, then we no longer have any epistemic reason to doubt we are morally responsible — Bartricks
One can have excellent evidence that X is the case, without having to know 'how' it is the case. For instance, I have excellent evidence my computer is working - it is working - yet if you ask me 'how' it is working, I haven't a clue. By your logic, of course, the fact I haven't a clue how it is working would constitute evidence that it isn't working! — Bartricks
fallaciously thinking that if one can't explain how something works, then one has evidence it isn't working — Bartricks
For what do you mean by 'how does it work?' — Bartricks
you are just appealing to the conventional assumption that we are physical bodies — Bartricks
Oh, and you commit further fallacies - you think that as there is no empirical evidence that we are uncaused causers (how could there be?), that means there is empirical evidence that we are 'not' uncaused causers. Which is fallacious. — Bartricks
Okay. Now, we have extremely powerful epistemic reason to think we're morally responsible. Billions - I mean, literally billions - of people have rational intuitions that represent themselves and others to be morally responsible — Bartricks
I also think more than one thing. — counterpunch
you were inviting me to make as ass of myself. — counterpunch
and mock your clumsy attempts at boxing me in. — counterpunch
Really? — Bartricks
In the OP I expressed disagreement with one of Strawson's claims, — Bartricks
Contemporary philosopher Galen Strawson wrote a famous article called 'The Impossibility of Moral Responsibility' in which - as the title suggests - he argued that it is not possible for anyone to be truly morally responsible. I think he is wrong. — Bartricks
So there we are: Strawson is wrong. — Bartricks
Most of that was just question begging. — Bartricks
What's your account? When does an evolutionary account of our rational intuitions discredit them, and when does it not? — Bartricks
I want to establish is that we have good reason to believe that there are no uncaused causers. The same reason we give for believing there are no unicorns or Yetis. We’ve looked and haven’t found any or even the effects of any. Moreover, for uncaused causers, we have found a massive volumes of contradictory evidence (conservation of energy and momentum) which is not even the case for the unicorn or yeti. What’s wrong with that as an argument? — khaled
When a difference between what is actually the case and what we think is the case cannot be afforded for the purposes of survival. — khaled
It's question begging, that's what. — Bartricks
There does not need to be any actual epistemic reason to believe those things in reality. — Bartricks
All that's needed to survive, is to 'believe' that we have epistemic reason to believe some things — Bartricks
Thus, you would end up having to conclude that epistemic reasons do not exist — Bartricks
You have failed this class. — Bartricks
In which premise is the conclusion assumed? — khaled
Now you’re applying epistemology to itself. “When can you reasonably believe that you can reasonably believe X?”. — khaled
There's no empirical evidence that nothing that exists exists uncaused — Bartricks
an argument you've done nothing to challenge any premise of. — Bartricks
So, insofar as you've thought at all about your position, you have simply assumed that all objects that exist are sensible objects. — Bartricks
If you think that an evolutionary account of a rational intuition serves always and everywhere to undermine that rational intuition's credibility — Bartricks
And that principle had better not be one that, when applied consistently, would undermine the credibility of our rational intuition that we have reason to believe things. — Bartricks
Here's what I'd say. If we have a rational intuition that seems - intuitively - to be inconsistent with the rest, and if we can in addition see that this particular rational intuition is one that seems highly adaptive, then we have some reason to suppose that that alone is why we are subject to it. That intuition can then be reasonably discounted. — Bartricks
There is no empirical evidence that unicorns don’t exist either. — khaled
An argument made over the internet about the existence of unicorns, or centuries of us failing to find them. I think the latter, wouldn’t you? — khaled
I’ve assumed that all objects capable of moving things are sensible objects. — khaled
I’ve been challenging premise 2 haven’t I? — khaled
Erm, yes there is. — Bartricks
What. On. Earth. Are. You. On. About? — Bartricks
Premise 2 says that if I am morally responsible, then not everything I do traces to external causes, yes? — Bartricks
Am I morally responsible? Well, I now have every reason to think I am - for my reason represents me to be - and no reason to think I am not. If you think otherwise, you need to show some fault in the first leg.
So, this premise is now one I have every reason to think is true, and none to think is false:
2. I am morally responsible. — Bartricks
b) you're too conventional and thus you think that if a conclusion is unconventional that itself is evidence that it is false. I mean, can you seriously not see how that assumption is question begging? Seriously? — Bartricks
It makes no sense to say you have empirical evidence something doesn’t exist. You can only have a lack of evidence that something exists. — khaled
Now replace “unicorn” with “uncaused causers” — khaled
I am challenging it by showing that the intuition that we are morally responsible can be dismissed. — khaled
Cod psychology. How about addressing the argument I made? That's what a philosopher would do... — Bartricks
Isn't that what every one of your discussions devolves to? Why is that, do you think? — counterpunch
Yes it does. Christ. — Bartricks
No parallel at all. — Bartricks
You've just ineptly dismissed all rational intuitions — Bartricks
The rest was just you question beggingly expressing your conventional views. — Bartricks
Present valid arguments that have the negation of my premises — Bartricks
Then we have as good evidence as we will ever have that uncaused causers don’t exist. — khaled
I did. The premise that we are morally responsible can be dismissed. — khaled
Deductively valid argument — Bartricks
Nope. You just can't construct a deductively valid argument that has the negation of one of my premises as a conclusion and has rationally compelling premises, can you? — Bartricks
Your premise 2 is fallacious. You cannot say that we are morally responsible simply because we seem to be and that it is metaphysically possible. As it would have seemed to us that we are morally responsible regardless of whether or not we actually are.
You tried to refute this by bringing up epistemology. But epistemology is not in the same boat as moral intuitions. Epistemological intuitions, if wrong, would get is killed. So we have good reason to think they’re correct. — khaled
What does 'a difference between an intuition and reality cannot be afforded' mean? It's gibberish. — Bartricks
Just express it in this form
1. If P, then Q
2. P
3. Therefore Q — Bartricks
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