Good stuff.
I especially like the connection between vulnerability and transparency: forthrightness can be a boast, but if you're really at your limit of certainty then it's a good idea to let go of the desire for certainty — Moliere
Transparency, though, is a way to subject yourself to the criticism of philosophy. — Moliere
Transparency is important in argumentation because it leads to truth and is an example of the virtue of courage. — NotAristotle
Additionally, transparent argumentation makes for a more productive argument because one's views will be more clearly presented and because the actual beliefs of the individuals will be honestly assessed. — NotAristotle
It is possible to hold a view and not be aware why one adopts it. Some ideas may accepted from others unquestioningly and there may also be psychological factors involved. — Jack Cummins
One very basic and concrete way towards transparency is replacing assertions with arguments, especially when an assertion has been questioned or has become contentious. — Leontiskos
It reminds me of a speech Chimamanda Ngozi Aldichie gave, the Freedom of Speech, in the Reith Lecture, where she stressed the importance of allowing ourselves to say something wrong and warned people of the danger of self-censorship. — Hailey
Apart from arguing that people, especially youngsters should engage more in conversations, she also pointed out the damage that cancel culture would do to the society, which would all impair transparency of arguments and hinder the freedom of speech. — Hailey
...neither concealing our own ignorance nor keeping silent to avoid conflicts would do anything good. — Hailey
A certain amount of transparency with oneself may be beneficial and it may not that once this achieved there may be less need to argue one's position. However, ongoing interaction, such as on a philosophy forum, may be useful for fluidity in thinking and ongoing modification of ideas in the light of new perspectives and development of knowledge. — Jack Cummins
a self-corrective critical community of inquirers — J
Bernstein has a lot more that’s interesting to say about the connection of rational inquiry with democratic values. — J
What are some of Bernstein's thoughts on the topic? — Leontiskos
Hope this gives you a sense of Bernstein’s interests in this area. — J
What then is Bernstein’s alternative to metaphysical foundationalism? Does he attempt to go the way of a coherentism that could resist the “will to self-assertion”? Does he attempt to avoid metaphysics altogether? — Leontiskos
A third and very common temptation is captured by Aaron Burr’s line in Lin Manuel Miranda’s Hamilton, “Talk less, smile more. Don’t let them know what you’re against or what you’re for.” Whether it is silence, sheepishness, or dissimulation, this is rooted in the fear of being criticized or being wrong. All of these temptations are aided by arguments which are opaque and difficult to discern. Transparency is a useful remedy. — Leontiskos
One very basic and concrete way towards transparency is replacing assertions with argument — Leontiskos
There are two basic ways that an argument can get at truth✝: by being right and by being wrong. — Leontiskos
Surely that line wasn't meant in the context of a private (!) philosophy forum, was it? — baker
In any interaction, it is vital to discern what type of interaction it (potentially) is. — baker
I think you've largely just used the word "transparency" to refer to having an argument. — Judaka
An assertion with no argument = there was no argument, surely. — Judaka
It would be just semantics, but it's the entire premise of your OP. That transparency, which seems to be nothing more than sharing/giving your argument, is a prerequisite for a good argument, and by your own logic, it isn't. — Judaka
If I argue that "This is the best way of doing X", — Judaka
To change what someone else thinks is true requires one to be compelling, intellectually and emotionally, to help someone see the merits of a different approach or flaws in theirs. — Judaka
This is such a drastic oversimplification that it's misrepresentative and incorrect. — Judaka
To sum up, truth without an argument is useless and irrelevant. If one doesn't know why something is true, and they don't feel those reasons are compelling, then they won't care. A truth's value is dependent upon the quality of the argument, and what the argument succeeds in doing. — Judaka
Well, perhaps more than you wanted, but these meta-philosophical questions are deeply engaging for me. — J
There are two basic ways that an argument can get at truth✝: by being right and by being wrong. Yet in order for this to work the argument must be seen to be right or wrong. If it is seen to be right then it will lead the one who sees it into the truth of its conclusion. If it is seen to be wrong then it will lead the one who sees it away from specious reasoning and away from an unsound conclusion. In each case the crucial factor is that it be seen, that it be transparent. — Leontiskos
I just came across this thread, so apologies if I repeat what has already been said. I don't see philosophical arguments as being true or false, but rather valid or invalid; that is consistent with their premises or inconsistent with their premises. — Janus
I don't see philosophical arguments as being true or false, but rather valid or invalid — Janus
Can they be sound or unsound? I hold to the common view that they can. — Leontiskos
I understand "sound or unsound" to be equivalent to "true or untrue". — Janus
For example, two metaphysical postulates are "being is fundamentally physical" and "being is fundamentally mental"; these two polemical posits are the basic presuppositions of materialism and idealism respectively. Can we determine which is true? No.
Empirical propositions, and arguments based on them, can be sound or unsound, when their truth is determinable by observation. That's my take, anyway. — Janus
Classically, a sound argument is an argument that possess both validity and true premises. An unsound argument lacks one or both. — Leontiskos
There are two basic ways that an argument can get at truth✝: by being right and by being wrong. Yet in order for this to work the argument must be seen to be right or wrong. If it is seen to be right then it will lead the one who sees it into the truth of its conclusion. If it is seen to be wrong then it will lead the one who sees it away from specious reasoning and away from an unsound conclusion. In each case the crucial factor is that it be seen that it be transparent. — Leontiskos
Fair enough, I am stretching the conventional meaning of "sound" somewhat to apply to premises as well as arguments. I think it is fair to say that when an argument is claimed to be sound, we mean it is taken to be true, because every part of a sound argument, if it is valid, must be true, that is true premises and true conclusions consistent with those premises. — Janus
But idiosyncratic terminology aside, I think my point stands; metaphysical arguments cannot be determined to be true or false (or if you prefer, sound or unsound), whereas empirical arguments can be. — Janus
You may not want to engage this take, but I think it is apposite in that you speak of people coming to understand that philosophical arguments are true or false. — Janus
Now, if all you meant was that people can come to believe that philosophical arguments are true or false, then there would be no problem, but you seemed to be claiming that the truth of philosophical arguments is determinable and that is what I have been taking issue with. — Janus
If you don't believe metaphysics is truth-apt then presumably you don't get into a lot of arguments about metaphysics. Similarly, because we don't believe taste is truth-apt, we don't argue about taste ("de gustibus non disputandum est"). My advice in the OP applies to arguments, and people argue about theses that they believe are susceptible of truth and falsity. — Leontiskos
Well, I do get into arguments about whether metaphysical arguments are truth-apt, and I think it is true that they are not, for the simple reason that their premises cannot be determined to be true or false. — Janus
I think acceptance or rejection of metaphysical premises cannot but be a matter of taste, and as you say we don't argue about taste. — Janus
People believing metaphysical premises are susceptible of truth and falsity and their actually being so are two different things... — Janus
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