A question can be uninterpretable. It can be confusing. It can hide assumptions. It can be leading. But in what sense can it be wrong? — bert1
Oh it can very much be wrong, say if the question cannot be answered with anything that isn't contradictory. The realization that a question is a wrong one is a step towards asking a better one, one that makes different assumption.Anyway, I don't get it. How can a question be wrong? — bert1
That question ("why am I me"), only after extensive reflection, seems to be the wrong question. But asking the right question first requires identifying that the prior question is wrong, say by identifying premises it implies. — noAxioms
OK, so you're arguing from the standpoint of tact. You feel the ""Shouldn't we ask first....?" is a more polite way to convey the exact same thing, which it probably is.you don't need to start by antagonizing the original poster by telling him "You asked the wrong question." You could, instead, say "Shouldn't we ask first....?" or "Can you identify the premises you used?" — Vera Mont
It comes up a lot on the forum. Someone asks a question. And someone else tells them it's the wrong question. If I had time to make this a better OP I would look up examples, and may do that yet. It would be instructive, perhaps, to look at specific examples. But for now, I'm sure you will all recognise that this is a thing, telling someone they've asked the wrong question.
It always annoys me, and I go to my safe space to recover from the trauma. I don't have a wank though, or 'read a book' in private. Anyway, I don't get it. How can a question be wrong? A statement can be wrong. A proposition can be wrong. A belief can be wrong. An attitude can be morally wrong. — bert1
Just a note - the moderators are generally helpful in stopping people from shanghaiing a discussion if the original poster asks them to. — T Clark
Loaded questions, double-barrelled questions, complex questions—all could be considered fallacious. — NOS4A2
How can a question be wrong? — bert1
Perhaps the respondent is trying to say that you have made a Category Error, hence any assertions you make are "not even wrong". That kind of put-down is usually reserved for science vs pseudo-science arguments. :smile:A question can be uninterpretable. It can be confusing. It can hide assumptions. It can be leading. But in what sense can it be wrong? — bert1
:clap: :up:As I see it, most of the disagreements and misunderstandings here on the forum arise from people mistaking metaphysical questions from questions of fact. When someone asks a question I regard as wrongheaded from that perspective, I often point it out. — T Clark
:up:Loaded questions, double-barrelled questions, complex questions—all could be considered fallacious. — NOS4A2
If I had time to make this a better OP I would look up examples — bert1
That, of course, is the wrong question. — Banno
There is no qualifier for existential questions — Shawn
Who thinks it's OK to say "That's the wrong question"? — bert1
"Why am I me?" — noAxioms
"Why does time go slower for the twin in the rocket?" — noAxioms
"Why does everyone hate me?" — Benj96
"Why do the rich always get to be happy and not struggle?" — Benj96
"How well did my excellent, perfect example clarify things for you?" — Benj96
Perhaps the respondent is trying to say that you have made a Category Error, hence any assertions you make are "not even wrong". That kind of put-down is usually reserved for science vs pseudo-science arguments. — Gnomon
"Why is the sky solid?" — Benj96
have you stopped beating your wife? — Banno
"Why do things happen?" Seems like a question. — Mikie
In effect you want people to be forced not to point out erroneous or fraught questions. You are asking for etiquette to overrule logic. — Banno
1) who are atoms?
2) What is north of the north pole?
3) Where is is tomorrow?
4) When is timelessness?
5) Why is the sun happy? — punos
1) Joel, Barney and Ilsa. Unfortunately you've asked a panpsychist.
2) Nothing, the north pole defines what is north.
3) In my imagination.
4) It's impossible to specify a time in eternity. In time, one thing happens after another and you can talk about one event relative to another. In eternity, everything happens at once. So maybe the answer is 'now'.
5) I don't know if it is happy. I am interested in whether or not it has an inner life in general, and what behaviour might be a sign of happiness. — bert1
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.