Let's Pretend — Ciceronianus
Do you believe everything you've just pondered and written just now is "just pretend" or a child's game? — Outlander
I think a fair number of people argue for sport and enjoy the ego boost of imposing an argument they have learned to make; similar to studying a chess opening for traps and variations.I think mental "muscles" are indeed exercised in addressing such questions, and such muscles may be beneficial. But also, perhaps, it sometimes distances itself too greatly from life and the world and becomes pretense. — Ciceronianus
Something was possible and time passed. Next question."Why is there something rather than nothing?" — Ciceronianus
Perhaps it's unfair to characterize the discussion of some traditional philosophical discussions as mere "play." Perhaps it's kinder and more accurate to consider it to be a mental exercise. — Ciceronianus
Could you give an example of a question from a specific philosopher, and either show that they don’t answer it, or that their answer is either pretense or ‘distanced from life’? — Joshs
He explicitly states that our everyday opinions about the world are reasonable. — T Clark
He does this after he evokes ED, though. He pretends, and after pretending concludes he was correct from the beginning. — Ciceronianus
When we have no reason to doubt, we pretend to doubt. — Ciceronianus
So, if I say "Suppose it rains tomorrow, will they still have the game," I'm pretending it will rain tomorrow. Is that correct? — T Clark
Come now. Are you seriously claiming this is comparable, or analogous, to saying this? — Ciceronianus
I've always thought that a large part of philosophy is a speculative and imaginative activity in order to challenge assumptions. This even includes banal thought experiments. I wonder if it's too limiting or ungenerous to dub this 'let's pretend'? — Tom Storm
He does this after he evokes ED, though. He pretends, and after pretending concludes he was correct from the beginning. — Ciceronianus
In any event, Descartes did have reason to doubt. — Hanover
I take the thrust of your objection to be that you don't believe Descartes when he says he had doubt, and you suggest he's dishonest at some level in having asserted the doubt he did. Your objection is therefore an ad hom because it hardly matters whether he specifically did doubt what he says to have doubted. — Hanover
Isn't the nature of a hypothetical that we assume something for the sake of argument, regardless of truth? Hypotheticals themselves appear in the subjunctive, indicating they are not statements of fact, but are, as you say, "pretend" (e.g. "If I were you" versus "If I was you."). — Hanover
Come now. Are you seriously claiming this is comparable, or analogous, to saying this? — Ciceronianus
He had reason to doubt he had hands, eyes, blood, senses (though using them all to write that he doubted them — Ciceronianus
don't think it can be said a hypothetical situation is one in which we're asked to assume that everything is an illusion. What would be the hypothetical situation in that case? There could be no situation at all. He's doing more than asking a hypothetical question.
Imagine yourself asking this question in court. "Doctor, assume that your patient didn't exist. Would it be your opinion in that case that he had sustained a permanent injury?" — Ciceronianus
I think the absurdity of such claims highlights the fact he never could have believed them in the first place. — Ciceronianus
"Pretend" for the sake of speculation? contemplation? discussion? 'spiritual exercise'? Yes, of course.In other words, is philosophy, at least in some respects, an activity by which we pretend? — Ciceronianus
"Is there something rather than nothing"? (Re: 99.99% of every thing consists of empty space according to modern physics and ancient atomists pretend there are "atoms and void" (with the latter encompassing the former.)) Pseudo-question, if you ask me, that's been way too fashionable for too long.What satisfactory answer would there be to a philosophical question such as "Why is there something rather than nothing?"
Category error, counselor. You just claimed it's a "philosophical question" and now you're implicitly comparing it (negatively) to a "scientific answer". No bueno, señor.What criteria would we use to determine the sufficiency of an answer to such a question if no scientific answer is adequate?
It means we're using "nothing" is a non-ordinary way that requires some clarifying speciificity. Otherwise, "nothing" doesn't mean anything sensible.What more are we doing than pretending there could be nothing instead of something? What does that even mean?
Do you have grounds to question "what you know"? Or grounds to reject "what you know"? If in both cases you don't, then the question is moot.Here's another question: "How do I know what I know?" Again, I think no scientific answer is sought. What, then, is intended in asking the question?
Do we have grounds to question "we know we don't know what we know"? Or grounds to reject "we know we don't know what we know"? If in both cases we don't, then the question is moot.How do we know we don't know what we know?
Perhaps "what we know" is subconscious or that we are mistaken that we know "what we know".What would it mean to not know what we know?
My guess is that our skills for learning would be more explicit, even reflective, and self-corrective.What would be different if we did know how we know what we know?
Dialectics (well, some of us ...) :wink:What more are we doing than pretending we don't know what we know, and asking what would that mean or be like?
Category error, counselor. You just claimed it's a "philosophical question" and now you're implicitly comparing it (negatively) to a "scientific answer". No bueno, señor. — 180 Proof
Do you have grounds to question "what you know"? Or grounds to reject "what you know"? If in both cases you don't, then the question is moot. — 180 Proof
Perhaps, that "what we know" is subconscious or that we are mistaken that we know "what we know". — 180 Proof
I appreciate you disagree with them, but to the extent your disagreement rests upon your claim that they were simply disingenuous, there's no proof of that, and the argument is entirely an as hom. — Hanover
Regarding a pertinent hypothetical, I think this is more apt: "Doctor, assume an Evil Demon has caused you to think the plaintiff exists, and is your patient, and that you have treated him, but all this is but an illusion. In that case, would it be your opinion the plaintiff has sustained a permanent injury?" — Ciceronianus
How's this then: They claim to have no hands (or eyes, etc.) or to doubt they do, despite the fact that the see them, feel them, use them, and in every way act as if they know they have them and do not doubt that they do. But perhaps you don't think they acted as if they had hands or believed they had them. — Ciceronianus
Regarding a pertinent hypothetical, I think this is more apt: "Doctor, assume an Evil Demon has caused you to think the plaintiff exists, and is your patient, and that you have treated him, but all this is but an illusion. In that case, would it be your opinion the plaintiff has sustained a permanent injury?" — Ciceronianus
Something like this is what Descartes was after, a core notion self in the form of the ‘I think’ that could be considered immune to doubt. — Joshs
We cannot begin with complete doubt.
— Ciceronianus
That's what Descartes said. :rofl: — frank
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