First you go on to say reality is everything; then you posit something outside of everything; — Agent Smith
But imagination can change reality. — unenlightened
Yes, this supports the point. Imagination is within reality. — Hallucinogen
"YOU" is the participant in the dialogue who does not say that there is something outside of everything. That is "SOMEONE", the interlocutor who you're claiming has caught "YOU" in a compromising position — Hallucinogen
I'm looking for the name of an informal fallacy where you're arguing with someone who changes what they mean by a certain term between statements. It's similar to moving the goalposts, only within the argument rather than after the conclusion. It's also similar to Motte and Bailey, but not the same in that the Motte and Bailey is about switching a controversial claim for a popular one, rather than being about an argument.
It's a definitional fallacy but I don't know which.
Here's an example.
YOU: Reality equals everything and there's nothing outside everything, so reality is self-changing. — Hallucinogen
When you imagine a baseball, ok its imaginary. But its still real as far as it goes. Its just you can't do with an imaginary baseball the same things you can do with a baseball that exists in consensus reality. — Yohan
I disagree. What we know about reality is merely based on our observations and while our observations have allowed us to be able to predict what reality is and how it behaves, but it isn't without it's flaws.Anything which physically interacts, or interacts in any way, with our world, is real enough to interact with it, and so must be contained within reality to affect the rest of what we know to be reality. Proposing that something unreal is affecting reality is just a contradiction (because it affecting anything would make it real), like claiming something can exist and not exist simultaneously. This places imaginary things in the same reality as anything physical, since what we imagine affects our actions and physical reality from moment to moment.
This principle is not hasty, rather, it is one which covers any alternative scenario you could come up with and renders the question of what can exist to be quite simple, contrary to the claim that the subject is complex due to having no clear principle of what may be known or unknown and having to rely on rules of thumb taken from experiment. — Hallucinogen
It isn't a given that the statement "there's nothing outside of everything" or your other statement "anything that interacts with what is real must also be real" are true so therefore trying to state that it is a given either one of them to be true is a non sequitur fallacy.If you think either "there's nothing outside of everything" or "anything that interacts with what is real must also be real" is a nonsequitur, then you're free to try and explain why they are. — Hallucinogen
It isn't a given that the statement "there's nothing outside of everything" or your other statement "anything that interacts with what is real must also be real" are true so therefore trying to state that it is a given either one of them to be true is a non sequitur fallacy. — dclements
Are you talking everything in this universe or about everything in this universe and ALL other universes? If you are talking about ALL other universes (if there happens to be such things) then it is obvious that you nor anyone else in this universe (who has no experience with interacting this other universe) has any authority to speak about how this other universe operates since we know nothing about it. Even with this universe, human beings have a very limited knowledge on how things actually operate and the rules that most be followed. — dclements
All you are really doing is saying is that "YOU" define something that is "real" to be something that interacts with something else that is real. But what if the thing that is being interacted with in the first place isn't even "real" but only thought of as real in the first place? — dclements
like pretty much all axioms that anyone postulates they are only true because one believes them to be true. — dclements
it isn't a given that the way you think what "everything" is and means is actually the way it really is — dclements
I agree. Under the paradigm/narrative I choose to believe in, I dismiss all axioms and believe them to be false. It isn't that I believe that others who choose to believe that are axioms to be true are not rational human beings, it is only that I believe that they mistakenly follow other paradigms that are less accurate than if they didn't believe in axioms. Think of such self evident truths such as "God exists", "this is a war of Good vs Evil", etc. that have often proposed by those in power and realize that practically ALL of THEM are based on one's own beliefs and desires and almost always have nothing to do with how things really are.Your responses to me here all fall under the category of denying that there is an invariant guarantor of truth to base any axiom or definition on. What you're failing to notice in each case, is that this is self-refutational, and that is the basis for accepting that there are such self-justifying means for ruling the truth or falsehood of propositions that cover all cases. — Hallucinogen
I realize and understand the rules of causation/processes pretty well. Our world is made up of countless processes each in itself created from an endless succession of other processes that created it. The problem with such an idea is that it is merely a mental model of the world we live in and it isn't a given that it describes the world we live in. For example, we know that 1+1 equals 2 which in itself may seem like it is a truth, but it is only truth in out mind. We may make as many mental models of the world around us that we choose, but we shouldn't fool ourselves into thinking our mental models we choose to create and the reality outside of minds are the same thing. After all neither "1" nor "2" actually represent anything in the world outside of us beyond the labels we choose to give things.The presence of an interaction itself is what defines being real - is the feature that a real thing has - proposing interacting with an unreal thing is an oxymoron/self-contradiction. For something to not be real means for it to be incapable of changing anything in reality. This very point is pretty much in the OP. — Hallucinogen
The only confusion here is from you not understanding the paradigm I have been trying to describing to you. Or as Kahashi might put it:All of these objections ultimately stem from you thinking that true might not under all circumstances be the negation of false, which is the general form of what you've said here, including insinuating that what is real could turn out to be, or interact with what is, unreal. It is for systematic reasons that anyone holding the position you are holding about true definitions ends up contradicting themselves in any claim they make about those definitions or about what can be known using them. These errors perpetuate because you are not noticing them. — Hallucinogen
Applying a truth-value to every element in a domain, as an invariant and valid operation toward producing a result; there you go using a self-evident axiom again.ALL of THEM — dclements
The examples that I gave and am basing my argument on aren't. They're self-evident in logic. Using examples other people have incorrectly said are self-evident isn't a counter-argument to my position.are based on one's own beliefs and desires — dclements
So there is a true way in which things are?how things really are. — dclements
So black swan theory is a true axiom?"Black Swan Theory" — dclements
I don't think it "assumes" a thinking being, rather points out to you the fact that you are thinking. All it assumes is a dependence of thinking on being, and so therefore produces the result that observing you are thinking proves that you are being.Descartes's "I think therefore I am". It assumes that a "thinking thing" — dclements
It doesn't need to.However, it doesn't address the issue of how such a thing exist — dclements
Like all formulations of logical relativism, this is a self-contradiction. It's literally "the x is not x"."The only truth (axiom) is that there is no truth (or 'true axiom")" — dclements
"The only truth (axiom) is that there is no truth (or 'true axiom")"
— dclements
Like all formulations of logical relativism, this is a self-contradiction. It's literally "the x is not x" — Hallucinogen
Isn't it like that? — Cuthbert
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