Do you think Lalatos’ approach to the logical proof is consistent with the later Wittgenstein? — Joshs
See my comments above regarding Feyerabend. The issue you raise has been of interest to me for the last forty years, and remains unresolved. — Banno
scientific progress does not result from a more or less algorithmic method - induction, falsification and so one - but is instead the result of certain sorts of liberal social interaction - of moral and aesthetic choice. — Banno
Wittgenstein was the biggest philosophical fraud of the twentieth century". — Joshs
The classic example of incommensurable paradigms is from The Structure of Scientific Revolutions — Banno
Sure. Incommensurability is indefensible, so those who propound it soon backtrack. Feyerabend did the same. — Banno
Hmm. I have difficulty seeing why this is a problem for Davidson. Where does memory fit in his argument? — Banno
Reference doesn’t have to be made to ‘the way things really are’ , only to pragmatic differences in behavior. — Joshs
Reference doesn’t have to be made to ‘the way things really are’ , only to pragmatic differences in behavior.
— Joshs
Hmm. Does Davidson assume that? Or are you saying he accuse his antagonists of so doing? — Banno
horses for courses — bongo fury
To be a law of logic, a principle must hold in complete generality — G Russell
SO this potentially comes back to asking if logic is normative. I'm thinking that it isn't. That is, it sets out what we can think, but does not set out what we ought think. — Banno
choosing logical pluralism over logical monism leads to more fruitful discussions. — Banno
Logical nihilism reminds me of the law paradox: There is one law and that law is there are no laws. — TheMadFool
Unrelated but I never understood how statements like this are paradoxical. Just add a “except this one” at the end and the paradox is resolved. — khaled
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