What does power mean but "from itself". But what is God? The MIND asks this. Or maybe this God can't produce from himself because he can not be imitated. — Gregory
I don't believe the kind of inter-subjective verification at work in such contexts is in the same class as the inter-subjective verification that operates in empirical observations, mathematical proofs and logic, because the latter kind of verification is such that it will definitely convince any suitably unbiased and competent agent, and the competency itself can also be publicly demonstrated. The same lack of public demonstrability applies to aesthetics; it can never be definitively shown that a creative work is great for example. — Janus
The vast majority of our scientific knowledge and beliefs are faith-based. The percentage of people who have first-hand knowledge or understanding of any given scientific theory is slim to none, and yet these same people will often know the names and the gist of these theories and will assent to them as being true. — Leontiskos
I think ↪Quixodian's post was accurate. You seem to be taking a least-common-denominator approach. "If the hoi polloi cannot verify a claim, then it doesn't possess intersubjective agreement." — Leontiskos
My claim is that the only definitive intersubjective testability we have of human knowledge is in relation to empirical observations, mathematical results and logic. This has nothing at all to do with the "hoi polloi". — Janus
...and the competency itself can also be publicly demonstrated. — Janus
As Quixodian has pointed out, this sort of claim is circular. It is only demonstrable to those with the relevant presuppositions and training, and whether such presuppositions and training count as competence merely depends on who you ask. — Leontiskos
Nevertheless, unlike faith based entities (such as gods), there is evidence available for scientific knowledge which people who have education can access and verify and demonstrate to work. I suspect that aligning this testable, demonstrable, if arcane knowledge with faith can lead to conceptual problems elsewhere. Thoughts? — Tom Storm
I think Schopenhauer too optimistic. There is no blissful escape. — schopenhauer1
No, they are not equal, but they are equally intersubjective. — Leontiskos
The appeal to "competence" is likely a quasi-knowledge claim. — Leontiskos
Firstly, in current science, there are many huge interpretive conundrums, for instance the debates about string theory and the multiverse, and whether theories of same ought to be testable in principle — Quixodian
What really irked me was the demand that 'intellectual honesty dictates' that I acknowledge that common-sense attitude as the arbiter for the truth or otherwise of Buddhist epistemology- exactly as Leontiskos described — Quixodian
It has everything to do with the hoi polloi. When you say that a scientific claim is testable you mean that you would subject it to the scientific expert for confirmation. You don't mean that you would find the average guy on the street and ask him if it is true. Yet when it comes to the Buddha's claim you are apparently content with the average guy on the street. — Leontiskos
If you are concerned with intersubjective agreement, then there can be little question that there is significant intersubjective agreement among Buddhists about the various states of consciousness, and that this is based on independent 'experimentation'. — Leontiskos
How does he know he is right, and all Osho's followers were wrong? — Janus
Scientific observations are really only augmented empirical observations. Even the "hoi polloi" know how to test claims like "it is raining" or "there is a tree growing three meters from the shed" or :"the surf today is bigger than it was yesterday" and even they can look up tabulated information to determine whether it is true that there is currently global warming. There are countless such truths about the world we share that even the poor moronic hoi polloi can test.
You cannot deomstrate that it is possible to see "the deathless". You might be one hundred perecent convinced that you have seen it, just as I might be onehundred percent convinced I have seen a unicorn; my conviction is not intersubjective verification for anyone esles that I have seen it, even if there might be those of like mind who agree. — Janus
That altered states of consciousness happen and that they may sometimes be achievable via certain disciplines is not in question, but even if those states were reliably achievable that does not prove anything metaphysical speaking... — Janus
...it is not even possible for anyone to know with certainty that any particular claim to have achieved such a state is even true; they might be lying about it. — Janus
This brings us back to the question as to how you would determine whether Osho was enlightened... — Janus
But intersubjective agreement is a very weak criterion, and it does not satisfy the belief that some intersubjective agreements are better than others. The quality of intersubjective agreement, taken in itself, can only be a matter of quantity (i.e. how many people agree). Once we begin to vet the subjects, we have introduced a second notion (expertise) that really goes beyond the simple idea of intersubjective agreement. — Leontiskos
(Note I've reverted back to my previous username) — Wayfarer
The intersubjective agreement will be wider when it comes to obvious realities that are accessible to everyone. Are you saying anything more than this? — Leontiskos
It proves that they exist and that they are achievable, which is a metaphysical truth and is the point in question. — Leontiskos
You wish to talk about "certainty" but you won't venture beyond intersubjective agreement. Intersubjective agreement about a claim does not produce certainty about a claim. You continue to equivocate between intersubjective agreement and stronger claims, akin to knowledge. — Leontiskos
You've obviously made up your own mind, I'm not going to engage in the probably futile task of argument about it. — Wayfarer
The point was that it is not possible to publicly demonstrate whether... — Janus
Yes, I am saying that some claims can be definitively confirmed by empirical observation and others cannot. — Janus
I would not count that as a metaphysical truth, but as a phenomenological truth. — Janus
We can be certain of intersubjectvely testable claims, barring extreme skepticism, such claims constitute public knowledge. — Janus
I think it is telling in Buddhism that you have to be born so you can escape the burden. — schopenhauer1
I think the Buddhist view would be that even if you don't procreate, you will be re-born in a future existence in accordance with your karma — Wayfarer
I suppose in the absence of a belief in re-birth, it seems like escaping the cycle - but again, that is a nihilistic view. (Important distinction: there's a world of difference in religious philosophies between 'nothing' and 'no-thing-ness'. T — Wayfarer
isn't that convenient... — schopenhauer1
Saying something is "nihilistic" doesn't impute anything other than it's a term you use for X. — schopenhauer1
Or not - it might amount to a very 'inconvenient truth' indeed. — Wayfarer
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