Wheatley         
         
DingoJones         
         
Wheatley         
         It seems like you're conflating contentions with beliefs. Beliefs are personal.You only have to justify your beliefs if you want them to be taken seriously. If they cannot be justified you can’t be surprised when they are dismissed by others. — DingoJones
DingoJones         
         
Wheatley         
         No, because you're the one whos making that distinction, not me.could you tell me what you mean exactly by making the distinction between “belief” and “personal belief” — DingoJones
DingoJones         
         
Wittgenstein         
         
baker         
         Those who are superior to you in a particular context. E.g. your teacher in school, or your boss at work.Who decides what is justified and what is not? — Wheatley
The standard of the person who has more power in the institutional hierarchy than you.What standard do we have to judge whether a believe is justified?
You don't need any justification. Why limit yourself with reason. Transcend reason. Be a force of nature — Wittgenstein
T Clark         
         After all, common folks (David Hume called them "vulgar") don't feel the need to justify their beliefs, why should I? — Wheatley
Bartricks         
         
Banno         
         You only have to justify your beliefs if you want them to be taken seriously. — DingoJones
Bartricks         
         For a belief to be justified there needs to be a compelling reason to believe it. — Wheatley
DingoJones         
         
Banno         
         
DingoJones         
         
Wheatley         
         That makes sense.Justification is needed when time comes to use knowledge as the basis for action. Actions have risks, consequences. I can't make a reasoned decision about the possible outcome of an action unless I understand the factual basis of my understanding, the uncertainties associated with it, and the justification for it. — T Clark
Wheatley         
         I don't want to.Why limit yourself with reason. Transcend reason. Be a force of nature — Wittgenstein
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