Don't you think that lawyers pretend as well? This very moment, I'm pretending I care what you think about lawyers. What wonders will I learn from this pursuit? — Ciceronianus
It happens Dewey indeed said that (although I paraphrase). You may find that out for yourself if you manage to convince yourself there is an Internet and you can access it. I happen to agree with him. And with Peirce that what he calls "self-deception" on the part of Descartes shouldn't be indulged in. — Ciceronianus
He had reason to doubt he had hands, eyes, blood, senses (though using them all to write that he doubted them)? — Ciceronianus
If you and others believe he really thought he had no hands, or eyes, or nose, or ears, and that an Evil Demon was having a joke at his expense, then by all means say so. If you don't believe he thought that, but nonetheless said he would assume that was true, have the kindness to say that as well. — Ciceronianus
The point is Descartes did not believe he had no hands etc. He found himself capable of doubting he had hands etc, on the strength of the possibility that he might be dreaming, it might be a trick played on him by the ED and so on. He went through the process of identifying everything he could possibly doubt in order to see what he could not possibly doubt. — Janus
The point is Descartes did not believe he had no hands etc. He found himself capable of doubting he had hands etc, on the strength of the possibility that he might be dreaming, it might be a trick played on him by the ED and so on. He went through the process of identifying everything he could possibly doubt in order to see what he could not possibly doubt.
— Janus
I re-post this, which you (perhaps conveniently?) failed to respond to previously. — Janus
But also, perhaps, it sometimes distances itself too greatly from life and the world and becomes pretense. — Ciceronianus
It doesn't do anything so useful and worthy when it entails questioning the existence of the "external world" — Ciceronianus
Are you offended that Descartes had thoughts that he didn’t have to? — Srap Tasmaner
Descartes was able to imagine a scenario in which the existence of his hands (to stick to the example) could be subject to doubt. — Janus
Like "pretending," "imagining" something to be the case isn't believing it to be the case. — Ciceronianus
Does it also show that you shouldn't quote someone without quoting the "background material" as well, and then complain that the person you provided the quote to hasn't bothered to read the "background material"? — Ciceronianus
I think he never, really, thought that an Evil Demon was fooling him, or that he thought he had no hands, no eyes, or that he thought any of things he said he would assume didn't exist didn't, in fact, exist. — Ciceronianus
I'm struggling to see what your point has been. Are you accusing him of disingenuously pretending to honestly believe he had no hands, or what? — Janus
I'm saying he pretended to have no hands (and so on). I'm unsure how to make this any clearer. He entertained a faux doubt--he feigned doubt--for the purpose of justifying the fact he never had any doubt in the first place. — Ciceronianus
Do you think this was an important idea for him to convey , an idea deserving of analysis within thousands of doctoral dissertations written over the past few hundred years? — Joshs
Tell me how much stronger Descartes’ argument would have been had he eliminated reference to the ED — Joshs
Descartes never felt any doubt he had hands — Ciceronianus
You’re wrong. Descartes had reason to doubt he had hands. I imagine if you were to ask him point blank what odds he would give that he had no hands he would say something like 1/10th of 1% or less, probably much less. That is not certainty of having hands, that is exceedingly strong confidence of having hands. The point isnt the percentage of doubt. It is that there is no way to exclude at least a smidgeon of doubt, due to the possibility that one’s faculties of cognitive judgement have been deranged. That is a vital and important point to make about where cognitive certainty and doubt come from, especially when it is contrasted with what he claimed one can be indubitably, 100% certain about in cognition. — Joshs
I merely think it was a pretense. — Ciceronianus
traditional philosophical discussion ... sometimes distances itself too greatly from life and the world and becomes pretense — Ciceronianus
I wonder about that. For Descartes to respond imaginatively to his experience as he did — is that “distancing” himself from life, rather than another possibility of life? Is there no imagination in the life and in the world you suggest are our proper study? — Srap Tasmaner
I think that entertaining pseudo-questions isn't beneficial. — Ciceronianus
Philosophy (in the past at least, and it seems for some now) cherished certainty and perfection. Philosophers sought immutable truth, beauty and goodness. They treated the "real world" and ordinary day-to-day life as imperfect and consequently inferior, unhelpful in seeking the absolute. — Ciceronianus
Philosophy (in the past at least, and it seems for some now) cherished certainty and perfection. Philosophers sought immutable truth, beauty and goodness. They treated the "real world" and ordinary day-to-day life as imperfect and consequently inferior, unhelpful in seeking the absolute. — Ciceronianus
He does this after he evokes ED, though. He pretends, and after pretending concludes he was correct from the beginning.
— Ciceronianus
That's because he wrote the Meditations as a series of ready-to-use arguments that Catholics could use to convert other people to Catholicism. He says as much in the preface, it's why the Church allowed the publishing of the book. — baker
Holy Mother Church has so much to answer for, I'm afraid. — Ciceronianus
He believed he had hands without the certain knowledge he had hands — Ciceronianus
He believed he had hands without the certain knowledge he had hands
— Ciceronianus — hypericin
This underpins our modern understanding of science, that every theory is provisional in principle. This extends to our pragmatic, mundane lives: we cannot explain any phenomena definitively, another explanation may always come along which explains the same thing equally well, or better. — hypericin
This was my addition to your list, sorry I thought it was obvious.Where did you find this? — Ciceronianus
is that it supports the existence of an Evil Demon as much as any other explanation of our observations? — Ciceronianus
You seem to be on the "quest for certainty." No certainty, no basis for judgment. — Ciceronianus
If so, the belief we're hatched from eggs by the will of God is just as reasonable as any other explanation of our existence. — Ciceronianus
This was my addition to your list, sorry I thought it was obvious. — hypericin
I greatly prefer stable, mind independent objects, over ED. — hypericin
Even if we could somehow shoehorn this theory to fit all observations, the resulting model would be so baroquely complex we would reject it. — hypericin
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