It seems to me that you are arguing that there is no contradiction involved in the sceptical thesis and thus that the sceptical thesis is not self-refuting. (Unless I have misunderstood). — Bartricks
I take it that a theory is 'self-refuting' when there would be a practical contradiction involved in believing it. — Bartricks
However, I take one of Descartes' lessons to be that self-refuting positions are more certainly false than those that contain contradictions. For I know more certainly that I exist, than that the law of non-contradiction is true. — Bartricks
Descartes's indubitable facts are his own thoughts--using "thought" in the widest possible sense. "I think" is his ultimate premiss. Here the word "I" is really illegitimate; he ought to state his ultimate premiss in the form "there are thoughts." The word "I" is grammatically convenient, but does not describe a datum. When he goes on to say "I am a thing which thinks," he is already using uncritically the apparatus of categories handed down by scholasticism. He nowhere proves that thoughts need a thinker, nor is there reason to believe this except in a grammatical sense.
And "It is raining, but no one believes it is raining" would be another, as although it is possibly true - there seems nothing impossible about the scenario described - to believe it is to render it false. — Bartricks
All those points you mention will surely get us off topic, so I won't respond to them further, unless they are more directly related to the OP. — Amalac
So I do not believe that there are many philosophers who would claim otherwise. — Bartricks
lookup videos on that subject and what many philosophers have said about scepticism, and I'm sure you'll find many people using it. — Amalac
The claim, rather, is that it is 'self refuting'. "It is raining, but nobody believes it is raining" is one such thesis. It contains no contradiction. But it is self-refuting, for to believe it is to render it false. — Bartricks
The same is true where "there is no reason to believe anything" is concerned. For someone who believes it must, if they are not confused about the nature of what they believe, understand that this means there is no reason to believe that there is no reason to believe anything. — Bartricks
I have given a quote by Sextus Empiricus, as well as the Hume quote in the OP, that show that a significant number of philosophers in the past did claim that, and at present you may find that many people do claim that scepticism is selfcontradictory (not merely impossible to believe). If you don't believe me — Amalac
I get your point here, but some kinds of sceptics (phyrronian sceptics, as opposed to academic sceptics for example) would not put forward the argument as a proof that no argument can be proved, or claiming that we should believe that “there is no reason to believe anything”, rather they would mention it si that they could pit the arguments against the claim “there is reason to believe something” against those in favor of it, and then suggesting that we should suspend judgement as to whether or not there is reason to believe anything, since we seemingly have no way of knowing one way or the other in view of the apparent equipollence of each opposing argument. The practical choice between the two would then be a matter of taste, they may say. — Amalac
Yes, but this is tendentiously put: making it out to necessarily be a positive belief when it need not be. — Janus
No, it's just accurate. The person who believes that normative scepticism is true, must also believe that there is no reason to believe that normative scepticism is true, otherwise in what sense do they truly believe that normative scepticism is true? To believe that normative scepticism is true, is to believe that there is positively no reason to believe anything. So they believe that there is positively no reason to believe that there is no reason to believe anything. They're irrational then, right? — Bartricks
(I mean, Sextus and Hume are sceptics, right? So they are not the ones making the argument, they are simply addressing it - but that's not evidence that anyone has actually made it). — Bartricks
I do not really follow your meaning here. You accept, I take it, that the thesis that there are no reasons to do or believe anything is self-refuting? — Bartricks
Maybe they were lying and fabricated the arguments. Personally, I don't see any reason for them to lie about that, but I'm open to that possibility. — Amalac
But I meant rather “self-contradictory”. Perhaps I should correct the title. — Amalac
What I mean is that the academic sceptic makes negatively dogmatic claims such as “No belief can be justified”, “We know nothing”, etc. whereas the phyrronian suspends judgement and doesn't make any claims, neither affirmative nor negative. — Amalac
Sure, that applies to the person who believes normative skepticism is true, For a start, the very idea of normative skepticism is self-contradictory, because to hold such a position would be to believe that everyone must hold the same criteria for judgement as oneself, and this would obviously be, contradicting the thesis, a positive belief. — Janus
But a person can be a radical skeptic on the more modest basis of finding no reason to believe anything. The two positions are not the same. — Janus
However, many of the anticipated objections have not actually been made by anyone. — Bartricks
This I take to be the true state of the question, and cannot approve of that expeditious way, which some take with the sceptics, to reject at once all their arguments without enquiry or examination. If the sceptical reasonings be strong, say they, ’tis a proof, that reason may have some force and authority: if weak, they can never be sufficient to invalidate all the conclusions of our understanding. — David Hume
What is the Phyrronian thesis, though? That there is as much reason to believe any given proposition as disbelieve it? — Bartricks
It seems clear to me that the “they” he mentions is not merely a rhetorical device, but maybe I'm wrong. It really sounds like he's adressing an argument he read or heard about from other philosophers. — Amalac
As to your cat, it is not aware of the possibility of any philosophical standpoints, so your point there is profoundly irrelevant. — Janus
The contradiction consists in saying there is no reason to believe anything, and yet I believe something, if the claim is that one should not believe anything without reason. — Janus
If all skepticism is
wrong, then anything goes.
Since that's not the case, some skepticism is right. — jorndoe
If all skepticism is right, then doubt about skepticism is also right.
Hence, unjustified belief can be right. — jorndoe
in that case which parts of scepticism do you think are right? — Amalac
The problem is, we need justification in order to avoid having to randomly guess which beliefs are true and which beliefs are false (and which are neither true nor false). — Amalac
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