Most epistemologies agree, broadly, that beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation. — John Chlebek
I believe on some level he is begging the question. — John Chlebek
"beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation."
Is this observable or it is it a faith statement? — John Chlebek
Me:
"beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation."
I don't think this is backed by any observation. Therefore it contradicts itself. — John Chlebek
I have consistently found beliefs not backed by observation to be not reliable, so there is no contradiction. — John Chlebek
That would be empiricism, broadly speaking.
What you're getting at is close to the problem that emerged for verificationism. Verificationism was associated with positivism and the Vienna Circle during the mid 20th century. A J Ayer's Language Truth and Logic was a very influential book written on these principles, published 1936. It is a very tightly written and argued book. But the problems with positivism became evident over time, very much along the lines that you suggest - that verificationism is not itself an empirically verifiable principle. (Mind you putting it in these highly condensed and bald terms doesn't do justice to the scope of the debates about the subject). — Wayfarer
What is sometimes called fallibilism — StreetlightX
:point:Atheist epistemology?
It's got to do with an obvious fact viz. that there are two worlds - the physical and the mental - that define and constitute the human experience. — TheMadFool
What I'm getting at is the special status granted to the physical world and the way we treat the mental world with much contempt. There really is no good reason - apart from saving one's own skin - for doing that. — TheMadFool
They're abstractions from what, in reality, is a unity, which has mental and physical attributes — Wayfarer
But I believe on some level he is begging the question. — John Chlebek
Most epistemologies agree, broadly, that beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation. — John Chlebek
Beliefs are considered reliable when they are justified. One form of justification is observation.
Faith is belief despite the lack of justification. Faith glories in believing even when the facts lead elsewhere. — Banno
What observation backs your belief that 2+2=4?
Or your belief that you have a pain in your foot? — Banno
Then you have no justification, or reason, to believe that 2+2=4? Or that you have a pain in your foot? So, you're saying you have faith that 2+2=4 an that you have pains in your feet? — Harry Hindu
Hello:
I had the following conversation with an atheist and I was wondering if anyone had any thoughts. It went like this:
Atheist:
Most epistemologies agree, broadly, that beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation. Faith would be belief in that for which there isn't observation, and thus, beliefs so backed are not reliable.
Me:
"beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation."
I don't think this is backed by any observation. Therefore it contradicts itself.
Atheist:
I have consistently found beliefs not backed by observation to be not reliable, so there is no contradiction.
I'm not sure how to reply to this. But I believe on some level he is begging the question. He said that he has observed that non-observable statements are unreliable. I think his reply would work if he said "I have observed that observable statements are reliable." But the other is just an assumption and is not observable, at least not in the scientific sense he is saying. — John Chlebek
Then there are those whose only strongly held, non-falsifiable hypothesis is that God is not. They will acknowledge that scientific hypotheses are falsifiable, always subject to revision or rejection, but will cling to this particular conviction with adamantine firmness. — Wayfarer
I think Banno nails it. Some atheists will argue that methodological naturalism is the most reliable tool we have for gaining knowledge about the world. But science should not make proclamations about truth and is simply the best we have based on the available evidence. Capital T truth being out of human range and perhaps not even possible. — Tom Storm
Me:
"beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation."
I don't think this is backed by any observation. Therefore it contradicts itself. — John Chlebek
Indeed, but they can still be relevant, because often in life, it's about what is at stake, not what the stakes are.Atheist:
Most epistemologies agree, broadly, that beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation.
Faith would be belief in that for which there isn't observation, and thus, beliefs so backed are not reliable. — John Chlebek
You can observe that it makes a difference in a person's life whether they are committed to some particular standard or idea, as opposed to whether they are not.Me:
"beliefs can only be considered reliable when they are backed, (somehow), by observation."
More context is needed here, the specific theistic statements he commented on.I'm not sure how to reply to this. But I believe on some level he is begging the question. He said that he has observed that non-observable statements are unreliable. I think his reply would work if he said "I have observed that observable statements are reliable." But the other is just an assumption and is not observable, at least not in the scientific sense he is saying.
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