You explicitly did exactly that:I didn't mention any equivalences between negative statements — TheMadFool
...that's the same quote in the post you replied to.4. The bear = god — TheMadFool
You explicitly did exactly that: — InPitzotl
played a big role in my confusion.All of these are negative claims, but they are clearly not equivalent. — InPitzotl
It is indeed! They are equivalent in that they are all negative claims. But I don't think they have equivalent levels of burden. I don't see the self-contradiction. 4 and 7 are equivalent modulo 3, but you'd better believe I'd prefer 7 red velvet cup cakes to 4!Note you say "all of these are negative claims." That's an equivalence if ever there was one! — TheMadFool
It is indeed! They are equivalent in that they are all negative claims. But I don't think they have equivalent levels of burden. — InPitzotl
I don't understand the question (quite frankly, I have problems even parsing it). Are you asking why I think claims of the non-existence of something are negative claims, or are you asking why I think not all negative claims have equivalent burdens?On what basis do you claim that is? — TheMadFool
I don't need to check the fridge... there isn't enough room in my fridge for a horse to run in it.Why? — TheMadFool
I don't need to check the fridge... there isn't enough room in my fridge for a horse to run in it. — InPitzotl
No; I mean that some negative claims, like "there is no horse running in my fridge", can be reasonably held with less burden than other negative claims, like "there is no mold growing on butter in my fridge".So, you mean to say the positive statement, "a horse is in the fridge" is harder to prove than the negative statement, "a horse is not in the fridge"? — TheMadFool
The negative claim is about a horse running, not fitting, in my fridge. But we can bypass this. It is hypothetically possible that there is a horse none of us know about, which is so small, that it can indeed actually run in my fridge. But for such a horse to actually be running in my fridge, hypothetical isn't good enough... it must be actual. That's still possible. But lest you forget, I'm not talking about what's possible or what burden any particular claim has... I'm talking about the equivalence of burden between negative claims. It would be quite surprising, for good reason, to find a horse running in my fridge. It would not be nearly as surprising to find molded butter.The latter seems to follow in an immediate sense from the fact that a horse can't fit in a fridge. Thumbelina (2001 - 2018) — TheMadFool
A negative statement can't be discussed/analyzed prior to a positive statement that's subject to a similar treatment. — TheMadFool
I don't have sufficient evidence to claim fairies don't exist. Do you? What is it? — Down The Rabbit Hole
Remember what you said here: — Down The Rabbit Hole
the Wikipedia page on burden of proof/can't prove a negative — TheMadFool
p was asserted first. — TheMadFool
If I say "There is a traffic jam to avoid on that street" but not supply proof, then one may respond "Thank you for that information, I'll avoid that street" and thus grant the usefulness of my unproved assertion. — TonesInDeepFreeze
A negative statement can't be discussed/analyzed prior to a positive statement that's subject to a similar treatment. Before negation can be performed and a negative statement obtained, there must be a preexisting positive statement that can be negated. Ergo, positive statements precede negative statements and since every statement must be proved, it follows that the burden of proof rests squarely on the shoulders of one making a positive statement. — TheMadFool
We don't know that P was asserted before ~P. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Negation is an operation. It needs a proposition i.e. before I negate p and get ~p, the proposition p has to be there. Right? Just think of it, "not cat" makes no sense if "cat" doesn't exist as an idea. I rest my case. — TheMadFool
~P cannot be understood without first understanding P. But that does not entail that P must first be proved. Your "Ergo" is a non sequitur. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I myself have said over and over and over that you can't form ~P without first forming P.
But, and I've said this over and over and over, that does not entail that you must first prove P.
Your "I rest my case" is empty. — TonesInDeepFreeze
the debate begins with "god exists" — TheMadFool
No, I didn't miss your point. I dismissed it. This was quite explicit in the last post... you explicitly asked if I meant that the positive claim was harder to prove than the negative claim. And I explicitly said no, that I meant that some negative claims can be reasonably held with less burden than other negative claims.You missed the point. — TheMadFool
But TMF, it's not that I deny how easy this is to prove, it's that I deny its relevance to burden of proof. If Joe says there's no horse running in his fridge, I would accept that claim without checking. If Frank says there's no molded butter in his fridge, I would not accept that claim without checking. Therefore I place different burdens on different negative claims. How easy it is to check the claim is irrelevant; in fact, it's easier to show there's no horse running in a fridge than it is to show there's no molded butter.To prove that a horse is fitting/running/anything at all, all that's required for me to do is to open the fridge. — TheMadFool
And who would that be?Someone denying this to be possible — TheMadFool
I don't base my burden of proof here on what's possible; rather, it's based on what's reasonable:That's still possible. — InPitzotl
Put it this way. Allow me to describe a game. We take 1,000,000 fridges (all nice and plugged in and operational, like mine is). Every time we find a fridge with molded butter in it, you pay me 20 bucks, but only on one condition. If we ever find a single of these 1,000,000 fridges with a horse running in it, you pay me nothing; instead, I pay you 5,000 bucks. I feel safe playing this game.It is hypothetically possible that there is a horse none of us know about, which is so small, that it can indeed actually run in my fridge. But for such a horse to actually be running in my fridge, hypothetical isn't good enough... it must be actual. — InPitzotl
It's crystal clear that your method is to just keep insisting you're right without addressing the arguments. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I responded adequately — TheMadFool
We don't know that P was asserted before ~P.
I assert the following statement:
It is not the case that there exists a rainbow colored kangaroo doing yoga in the White House Oval Office now.
That statement is ~P where P is:
There exists a rainbow colored kangaroo doing yoga in the White House Oval Office now..
And P was not asserted before ~P.
The best you could correctly say is that, with the language formation rules, we cannot formulate ~P without first formulating P. But it's a naked non sequitur to claim that the syntactical formation rules entail rules for discourse. Not not only is it not the case that P must be asserted first, but it is also not the case that the fact ~P cannot be syntactically formed without first forming P entails that P must be proven first. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Different reasons:
To assert it.
To mention that someone else asserted it.
To wonder about it.
To mention it as a topic for discussion.
To mention it as a possible topic for discussion.
To stipulate a proposition to be the subject of a formal debate.
To mention that you will use it as the antecedent for a conditional.
To enter it as the first line of proof of its negation.
Etc.
And if it is to assert it, one can assert it without proving it. People do it all the time. It's not even always reasonable to expect proof:
If I say "There is a traffic jam to avoid on that street" but not supply proof, then one may respond "Thank you for that information, I'll avoid that street" and thus grant the usefulness of my unproved assertion. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Suppose there are two people (two propositions, p, ~p) in a line, and both are required to pay a fee (both need proof), shouldn't the first in the line pay the fee first (prove p first) and only then the second person (prove ~p second)?
— TheMadFool
(1) I don't think so, not necessarily. There could be better, more relevant factors used
(2) It is not even an operational analogy for the matter at hand anyway. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Certain negations have positive equivalents.
"It is not the case that the death penalty should be continued."
is equivalent to
"The death penalty should be abolished."
And
"The death penalty should be continued."
is equivalent to
"It is not the case that the death penalty should be abolished"
So, in such an example, there wouldn't even be a way using by your rule to claim which should be proven first. — TonesInDeepFreeze
you actually haven't argued your stand on the issue — TheMadFool
you explicitly asked if I meant that the positive claim was harder to prove than the negative claim. And I explicitly said no, that I meant that some negative claims can be reasonably held with less burden than other negative claims. — InPitzotl
My point has been to show that your arguments are specious. That doesn't not require "taking a stand" on anything other than what I have said. — TonesInDeepFreeze
insofar as existential claims are the issue, proving the positive is much, much easier than proving the negative. — TheMadFool
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