1. it is raining
2. it is not raining
If I entertain 1 I will find that if I were to believe it true I would not be wrong about it raining. Therefore, if I can be wrong about it raining 1 must be false and so 2 must be true. — Michael
The conclusion doesn't follow for exactly the reason I explained in that post. "I cannot be wrong" doesn't follow from "I am not wrong". — Michael
If all that exists is in one's mind one cannot be wrong about anything. — Isaac
I believe that something other than my mind does not exist
I am wrong if something other than my mind exists
Therefore either something other than my mind exists or I cannot be wrong
The conclusion doesn't follow. — Michael
It does. — Isaac
If only your mind exists then you must know everything — Isaac
If only your mind exists then you know of everything that exists. But it doesn't follow that you know that no other stuff exists. — Michael
You can't get from "only my mind exists" to "I cannot be wrong". — Michael
If only your mind exists then you must know everything, therefore you cannot be wrong about anything. — Isaac
I think the coins are a different scenario. — Pie
OK. John doesn't know that he knows of everything that exists. I'll add that to my computations. — Pie
But could that-which-exists be understood as including tendencies and relationships ? What of the conception of an entity as essentially relational ? An electron 'is' what it might do with what other entities might do and so on. — Pie
And I don't think mathematical realism (or a bunch of other mathematicians) is required for me to get maths wrong. — Michael
Someone coined the term "pi". He was quite capable of coining it without assistance. — Michael
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