Do you mean I should quote published philosophers on this like pragmatists and relativists? — Andrew4Handel
I watched the below video involving Rorty and in it they raised issue of the impact on civil rights movements on the idea that you can't define a concept among others such as whether you can define a vulnerable or threatened group or make a claim like "all men are made equal". — Andrew4Handel
this seems to be saying that the truth is instrumental in so much as it serves a purpose and not whether it is intrinsically true — Andrew4Handel
The moment pragmatism asks this question, it sees the answer: True ideas are those that we can assimilate, validate, corroborate and verify. False ideas are those that we cannot. That is the practical difference it makes to us to have true ideas; that, therefore, is the meaning of truth, for it is all that truth is known-as.
This thesis is what I have to defend. The truth of an idea is not a stagnant property inherent in it. Truth happens to an idea. It becomes. — William James
I feel that somethings are undeniably true and preserving the truth is valuable and that we rely on truths to negotiate life and I see no value in a kind of "anything goes interpretive relativism" outside of genuinely ambiguous things that have proven good grounds to dispute. — Andrew4Handel
Maybe you could say what you think is wrong with that. — Jamal
Things like "triangles have three sides, for instance. The simple example seems powerful because it's impossible to reasonably refute, — Judaka
Let's take ethnic or racial or sex differences. — Andrew4Handel
It would, indeed! As would pretending that "equal" (in a specified context) = "identical".It would be a charade to act like people are all the same
And how does one test for "undeniability"? — Vera Mont
I gave an example in a previous thread — Andrew4Handel
I said that we know language works — Andrew4Handel
"I live in the house with a red door and blue car outside" and people can successfully locate our house. — Andrew4Handel
I feel that somethings are undeniably true and preserving the truth is valuable and that we rely on truths to negotiate life and I see no value in a kind of "anything goes interpretive relativism" outside of genuinely ambiguous things that have proven good grounds to dispute. — Andrew4Handel
Somethings may not have truth value like moral claims and I think it is best to acknowledge this and put morality on fact based footing rather than have to create a society on unsustainable fictions unless that is a commitment we want to make. — Andrew4Handel
How does one put morality on a fact based footing? — Tom Storm
But who is concerned about any of this? Are you in a position to usher in a new world of conceptual understanding for humanity? — Tom Storm
By acknowledging that it is a set of preferences not facts divine or otherwise and not taking any claims for granted. — Andrew4Handel
And this is what was sort of referred to in The Rorty et al discussion I posted. Would you say to Martin Luther King "But who is concerned about any of this? Are you in a position to usher in a new world of conceptual understanding for humanity?"
Would you challenge his life and world changing statements by questioning his world view, authority and the truth value of his statements?
There are occasions where every little bit of activism and fight for your truth and values is vital. — Andrew4Handel
What's that in plain English? And how does it reconcile morality (which brand??) with fact (which ones??) — Vera Mont
The problem that I see we have is that we cannot say "genocide is wrong" and that be a factual statement. This could lead to moral nihilism.
The truth may be that nothing is right or wrong and there is no justice. — Andrew4Handel
The problem that I see we have is that we cannot say "genocide is wrong" and that be a factual statement. This could lead to moral nihilism.
The truth may be that nothing is right or wrong and there is no justice. — Andrew4Handel
Until we get to this point of acknowledging it our moral/justice systems will be a fiction. Acknowledging will mean we can decide that to do next and what the consequence is. — Andrew4Handel
Some philosophers do acknowledge the problem of moral truths like Hume's no is from an ought and
that they cannot be comparable to scientific facts. — Andrew4Handel
At a basic level it would be interesting to see what remains when we have clarified fact from fiction, faith, desires/wishes and supposition. I am skeptical that we are anywhere near building societies on facts. — Andrew4Handel
How does one go about deciding which "things" are undeniably true, which are conditionally, provisionally, situationally, temporarily or partially true, and which things are false to what degree? How does one determine what truths are worth preserving, by what means and how long? Hoe does one "prove" the grounds for sufficient ambiguity to dispute? — Vera Mont
Morality has failed and we have lost millions to war and genocide and preventable famine etc. And quite a lot of this seems to have been based around moral certainty and false "truths". — Andrew4Handel
How does one go about deciding which "things" are undeniably true, which are conditionally, provisionally, situationally, temporarily or partially true, and which things are false to what degree? How does one determine what truths are worth preserving, by what means and how long? How does one "prove" the grounds for sufficient ambiguity to dispute? — Vera Mont
Yes, if they asserted that some truths are indisputable. And each one would have a plausible answer as to how he would go about testing the veracity of a statement about any aspect of his speciality - and probably all of their areas of expertise.Would you ask this to computer scientists, a rocket engineer or surgeon? — Andrew4Handel
Nothing to do with relative difficulty. I've simply been asking you to outline your method of approach.You pose the question it seems any a way that seems to imply that it is too hard — Andrew4Handel
About what? Surgery? That was acquired by cutting open dead humans and live dogs for about 100 years; followed by two more centuries of trial and error.we already have a huge body of accurate and useful knowledge — Andrew4Handel
I would just continue the current process but apply it more rigour in non science and technology areas. — Andrew4Handel
When something is shown not to be factual then we institute an arbitration process such as how to run a society based on various people's desires and preferences and belief systems without the option of truth claims. — Andrew4Handel
So yes it can be important to clarify to yourself and others what is and is not true. — Andrew4Handel
Yes, if they asserted that some truths are indisputable. — Vera Mont
Are you happy to doubt that you are reading this? — Banno
At the least, while you might be able to doubt anything, it makes no sense to doubt everything. — Banno
I feel that somethings are undeniably true — Andrew4Handel
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