And are those bullet-points (the ones that relates to philsci) all solid points to make? I realize that in order to know if those bullet-points contrast with anything that Dillahunty has ever said, one needs to be familiar with Dillahunty's commentary on science. — Need Logic Help
Dillahunty has no problem talking about philosophy without having any philosophers check whether his philosophy commentaries are solid — Need Logic Help
There seems to be a potential major error here. If not, I apologize. — Need Logic Help
Thanks. I'm just pushing this idea as a potential fact: "the religious people are way off-base and Dillahunty also commits major errors when he wades into the pools of phil and philsci and logic and epistemology".
I just want to make that clear, since it's a false choice to say that either Matt is solid or his religious interlocutors are solid; they could both be wrong about various things in philosophy. — Need Logic Help
I'm just interested in the questions that I asked in the post about whether there's any bad philosophy being spread. — Need Logic Help
When you mention the "commonly cited" textbook, is that something that Dillahunty cites? — Need Logic Help
--"atheist" commentators probably make all sorts of philosophical mistakes, despite being correct in their conclusion that nonbelief is rational — Need Logic Help
philsci — Need Logic Help
Thanks for responding. I want to clarify something absolutely crucial.
I would imagine:
--nonbelief (in supernatural/religious claims) is not remotely controversial among leading scholars of epistemology
--serious scholars will not challenge "atheist" commentators on the issue of whether nonbelief is rational
--nonbelief is fully rational based on the most rigorous thinking in epistemology
--"atheist" commentators probably make all sorts of philosophical mistakes, despite being correct in their conclusion that nonbelief is rational — Need Logic Help
Thanks for replying!
1: I apologize for any vagueness. It's annoying to simply ask philsci (and other) experts to weigh in on this material, since it takes hours to try to watch all of these videos. It would be great if (e.g.) Dillahunty (or other hosts) had a simply book/paper that could be sent to experts to review, but instead the content is spread across all of these lengthy videos, so it's a lot of work to find out what their views on philsci (or other topics) even are.
2: I did link to various things in my post, though, so those could be commented on. There are "ten bullet-points" and also two YouTube-videos. I would be curious to know what people think about those things.
3: Falsifiability is a big one. Dillahunty talks in the two videos that I linked about how philosophy uses falsifiability, but one of the "ten bullet-points" that I linked to mentions that falsifiability is not actually relevant to philsci. And that's an interesting idea, since laypeople would imagine that falsifiability is crucial to science, so if it isn't then experts (on philsci) might clarify why it's not crucial and why science is able to function without it. — Need Logic Help
Does any serious/leading scholar of epistemology challenge the notion that nonbelief (in supernatural/religious claims) is rational? — Need Logic Help
This is easy to answer: Yes. The pope.Does any serious/leading scholar of epistemology challenge the notion that nonbelief (in supernatural/religious claims) is rational? — Need Logic Help
By "error", I don't mean anything technical. I simply mean: "Not knowing what you're talking about."
Suppose someone says that science relies on falsifiability in order to operate and in order to make progress, and then a philsci expert says: "Actually, falsifiability has not been relevant in our field (philsci) for decades." That would be an error, since the person is saying something that scholars would consider incorrect and that scholars would say (in this case) represents old thinking that went out of date decades ago.
So it's really just: "Things that leading/prominent/serious scholars in the field would consider misinformed or uninformed or incorrect." — Need Logic Help
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