Or if your definition of the world is, all that you perceive in your daily life, then you are seeing the whole world. But then a question arises, is your definition of the world objective?The underlined would suggest: Yes! But we must be humble about it to a very high degree! Not that this is news lol — AmadeusD
Philosophy is all about arguments. The conclusions are for each individuals. — Corvus
Not for me. Philosophy is about how you orientate your values, then come the arguments. My view is that people often settle on beliefs that appeal aesthetically, then a lot of post hoc rationalization comes into play. I also think the most interesting part is why people are drawn to certain arguments. Arguments dontl necessarily speak for themselves, they often speak to the biases of those who hold them. — Tom Storm
Well, whenever you return here, all you ever keep shouting is that whatever you read is fool and dimwit. How could anyone help you? :lol: — Corvus
It is not ideal, not morally good or even practically possible to force down a value of someone to the others. — Corvus
Well, I believe in calling a spade a spade, and it is not I who is looking for, or in need of, help. In any case, by all means carry on going around in your silly circle, it may be useless, but at least it will most likely provide a few laughs along the way, for others if not for you. — Janus
Yes, some do. I don't see a point doing it.I agree. But I'm not sure people always consciously do this. But they tend to use arguments as surrogates for value systems. A classic example of this is presuppositional apologetics for Islam or Christianity. But this is a digression. — Tom Storm
The scepticism on the world was one of the historical philosophy themes. In the ancient times, they used to take it seriously, and some of them stopped judging on all things. But nowadays? We just use the topic to practice and study philosophy. If anyone gets irritated with the topic nowadays, then he hasn't read a single book on philosophy or misunderstood the topic or question. That is how I would see it. :)My primary question when faced with arguments about whether the world is real, or if am I in a simulation, or if matter an illusion and idealism is the correct ontology - is what is the significance? Is there anything in my life I would do differently? Almost always the answer is no. — Tom Storm
If anyone gets irritated with the topic nowadays, then he hasn't read a single book on philosophy or misunderstood the topic or question. That is how I would see it. — Corvus
But it would be fair to say that there are differing schools of thought about what is worth pursuing and the temptation to write off the schools we disagree with as ignorant or 'not genuine' philosophy is probably unhelpful. (I'm not saying that you are doing this.) — Tom Storm
Questioning the reality of the world has been sufficiently done to demonstrate that it is not in any conceivable sense good philosophy — Janus
(I'm not saying that you are doing this.) — Tom Storm
If anyone gets irritated with the topic nowadays, then he hasn't read a single book on philosophy or misunderstood the topic or question. That is how I would see it. — Corvus
It was just a sincere and honest message to you and Janus that we seem to have totally different views even on what philosophy is. — Corvus
My engaging in any type of philosophical discussion with yourself, or Janus would be just total waste of everyone's time. So, all the best. — Corvus
If you read all my posts, you would realise that I welcome genuine philosophical arguments, criticisms and refutations based on logic and reasonings, and I always try to present the same to the serious interlocutors.It may well be the case that you want to encounter only views that you like or are able to appreciate. You would not be alone there. — Tom Storm
Apologies if I mistook your true intention. The fact that you were communicating with @Janus in supportive manner towards him could have sent out the impression that you were just here to accompany and assist @Janus for his disrespect for the thread.Well it hasn't been a waste of my time so this statement is wrong. I find your views interesting. If you do nto wish to engage with a member just ignore them. Most members employ this strategy here. — Tom Storm
But when one believes in the existence of the world, but says there is no justified belief in the world when not perceiving it. What would you class the position? — Corvus
↪Corvus, it's safer to think that what you won't know can still kill you.
But hey, you won't find any purely deductive disproof of solipsism either. — Nov 25, 2023
Hence, we try to seek justification on our beliefs and perception.
But point here is, can belief be justified properly? Belief is a psychological state, which cannot be justified rationally in nature.
Or are some beliefs also epistemic when justified? But if it cannot be justified, then it can't be. How do we justify our beliefs rationally? — Corvus
Sure. Good point. :up:Justified yes (evidential), proven no (purely deductive). ← different — jorndoe
to denote in any possible way that you feel relevant i.e. logically, epistemically, intuitively, phenomenologically ....By "properly" do you mean deductively, with logical certainty? — jorndoe
The concept of the world is such a historic and rich topic in the history of philosophy, if we even look at the very beginning in ancient Greece, Thales was the first man ever asked what the world is made of, which started the philosophical tradition.Metaphysics that have survived (this far, sort of, in corners of academia at least), are just that. For some proposition, p, if attainable evidence is compatible with both p and ¬p, then we strand there. And we're venturing into metaphysics. Not particularly informative, like a difference that makes no difference (though Bateson used that phrase differently). — jorndoe
I was reading "On the Plurality of Worlds" by David Lewis over the weekend, and in the book Lewis was discussing Modality of possible worlds, and it was interesting. Indeed, the book made me think about the concept of the world in terms of various different types of possible worlds, and their nature of existence.Hence it can be extended with modal logic. Knowledge of the real world needs the real world to stand on, if you will. — jorndoe
Thank you. Hope you had a great time. Later~Have a good weekend. Grabbing a JD#7 on the rocks. — jorndoe
Good question. They are invisible and inaudible, because they exist beyond our bodily sensibility. However, they can be felt or measured and read by the means of the instruments.all is energy, frequencies, and vibrations, why do we assume that objects unlike color and sound really exist? — boagie
Cause Descartes was himself trash — Vaskane
all is energy, frequencies, and vibrations, why do we assume that objects unlike color and sound really exist? — boagie
They are invisible and inaudible, because they exist beyond our bodily sensibility. However, they can be felt or measured and read by the means of the instruments. — Corvus
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