So pragmatically that leaves us with (4) and (5). How do we decide between them without knowing any unknown truths? — Michael
1. “All truths are knowable” is knowably true
2. “All truths are knowable” is false — Michael
Do you think it is possible to know whether the claim that there are unknowable truths is true? — Janus
Answer the question I posed: Do you think it is possible to know whether the claim that there are unknowable truths is true? — Janus
It is obviously impossible even in principle. because no matter how many truths we know there could always be an unknowable truth. — Janus
“….The very idea that our cognition should be nothing but a representation of something mind-independent consequently has to be abandoned….” — Dan Zahavi, Husserl’s Legacy
1. Deny the existence of mind-independent objects and/or
2. We cannot grasp the features of external objects which happen to be mind-independent and/or
3. We cannot justify our knowledge of mind-independent objects — Sirius
It is obviously impossible even in principle. because no matter how many truths we know there could always be an unknowable truth.
— Janus
This is begging the question. — Michael
1. "there are unknowable truths" is knowably true — Michael
All that to express interest in a forthcoming (?) metaphysical heuristic predicated on abandonment of “the very idea that our cognition should be nothing but a representation of something mind-independent…”, at least with regards to empirical knowledge. — Mww
If there is a truth as to whether there are unknowable truths, then that truth is an unknowable truth. So we know there is at least one unknowable truth. If you think there is something wrong with the reasoning, then say what it is. — Janus
You go from a) "there are unknowable truths" is unknowably true to b) "there are unknowable truths" is knowably true. This is a contradiction. If (a) is true then (b) is false and if (b) is true then (a) is false. — Michael
However if it is right that the truth or falsity regarding the existence of unknowable truths is unknowable then we know that there is at least one unknowable truth. There is no contradiction — Janus
However if the starting assumption is that the truth or falsity regarding the existence of unknowable truths is unknowable then we know that there is at least one unknowable truth. — Janus
What about all the truths regarding what happened in the pre-human past? Are they unknowable? You might say they are not unknowable in principle. — Janus
I provisionally assume that "there are unknowable truths" is unknowable and then show that this leads to a contradiction, which shows it must be false. — Janus
so 1. must be true. — Janus
But that has been shown to be false — Janus
We know it is impossible to answer the question as to whether there is more than one unknowable truth. — Janus
But the import is that the acuity of perception to see ‘what is’, is an ethical discipline rather than an objective methodology, let’s say. — Wayfarer
The antirealists must be wrong though because they cannot rule out the possibility that unbeknownst to us there might be unknowable truths. Just stipulating that truths are only truths if they are known seems obviously wrong as it does not accord with the general notion of truth.
What if the question is changed to whether there are unknowable actualities instead? What about, for example, the question regarding the existence of God? We know we cannot know the answer to that, no matter how plausible or implausible the existence of God might seem. Would you say there cannot be a truth about whether or not God exists, despite that fact that it is obviously impossible to know? — Janus
If God exists then we can know that God exists, and if God doesn't exist then we can know that God doesn't exist. — Michael
I haven’t grasped a form of qualitative value judgement, in keeping with an ethical discipline, in phenomenology, even if some sort of specialized perception for what is, is its objective. — Mww
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