Maybe more plainly, we speak of what is indeterminate and what is determinate.
And I agree there are worlds (or at least the world) that sits between these poles. — Fire Ologist
Why must wisdom "have some determinate content"? There's the idea again that if it has no "determinate content" then it is nothing, but that doesn't follow. The assumption is that without determinacy—without clear, specifiable content—“wisdom” is vacuous. But this is not a necessary conclusion. The leap from indeterminacy to meaninglessness is unwarranted. — Banno
Tim's objection, so far as I can make sense of it, is that if we allow a case in which it remains undecided if some sentence is true or false, then the concatenation of sentences contains a contradiction and anything goes. — Banno
Count Timothy von Icarus is using determinate/indeterminate as a contradictory pair — Leontiskos
Exactly!
Thanks for your help. :lol: — Banno
There's clearly something in this all-or-nothing position that seems incontrovertible to you. I will keep trying to understand it, but no luck so far. — J
I don't think it's that hard to get. Either all narratives are acceptable/true/valid, whatever you want to call it, or they aren't. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Some here seem to have a prejudice against the very notion of contradictory pairs. For example: — Leontiskos
See if you can reply to these examples, rather than indulging in personal insults. — Banno
Others have an obsession with the same. — Banno
Determinate/indeterminate is not a contradictory pair. Many things are partially determined. Borderline concepts - "baldness"; — Banno
Which is just to say, the term wisdom has to have some determinant content or else... — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, can we agree that sometimes determinate/indeterminate are not contradictories? — Banno
And maybe, that wisdom might sometimes not have a determinate content? — Banno
Count Timothy von Icarus's "some determinate content" vs. "no determinate content" is clearly a binary. Don't you agree? — Leontiskos
Sure. And in setting this up as a binary, he already forecloses on the possibility of it not being a binary. He presumes what was to be shown. That's why J fairly suggests he account is uncharitable. — Banno
Why does J continually fail to answer such questions? Does he want to argue for some third option? Does he think the animal doesn't have eyes, and it also doesn't not have eyes? — Leontiskos
"Qualia" are either a something about which can share nothing, or they are the subject of the common terms we already use to talk about our experiences. — Banno
(and yes, I admit I hit you back first. ) — Banno
Why does J continually fail to answer such questions? — Leontiskos
That is, J has been providing examples of where the binary does not hold — Banno
Further, why should it be up to us to demonstrate that the binary does not hold, and not up to you to demonstrate that it does? — Banno
A step back. Look at your example of this discussion being like shooting an arrow - to shoot well, you need a target. But that assumes that there is a target, that we already have the conclusion. — Banno
Perhaps a better analogy would be were we are working together on a construction, but do not agree as to the final result. — Banno
We might reach agreement on fitting this bit you made in with the bit I made, and work together towards something satisfactory to us both. — Banno
Why need we presume the conclusion? — Banno
You're far too good a rhetorician not to recognize the difference in tone between my version and yours . But it's not worth squabbling over
If you engage in a practice consistently and thoughtfully, you know reasonableness in that practice when you see it, usually
Count T, I just don't know how many different ways I can try to say it. If you, or anyone, puts forward a position within some practice, and I know you and respect you, I'm going to assume that you do so with far better reasons than "bare personal preference." If people went around declaring their "bare personal preferences" with others in the practice, in short order no one would talk to them. Hasn't that been your experience as well, in whatever projects you've engaged in over the years? This is the "absolute-or-arbitrary" bogeyman again.
One person's "incredibly vague" is another person's "good enough to be going on with." And of course this applies at the level of disciplines as well -- lots of variance in how much precision is needed for a given subject.
Likewise, I simply can't imagine a serious scholar or thinker saying, "How could I possibly be wrong?" Rather, the usual attitude is, "This is how it seems to me. Profs X and Y have said similar things, Profs V and W offer some counter-evidence, and draw different conclusions. OK, here's why I think X, Y, and me are in the right on this. Let's discuss." I know you think that out of such a discussion we would get a clear, criteria-based, permanent answer -- and I don't deny this sometimes happens, but not often. And yet, mirabile dictu, some tentative consensus may be reached, and the practice goes on.
I think the form of Count Timothy von Icarus' statement is sufficient to shift the burden of proof onto the one who denies that it is a true binary. — Leontiskos
He is providing examples of where the binary does not hold. That is different to pointing to places where there is a third option. See . Note 's response. Consider what it is they are agreeing on.I would love for someone to point me to the place where J provided a third option. — Leontiskos
I don't see how what you say here forms an argument. I do not see why Tim's statement implies anything about burden of proof. Stating that all statements are binary does not show that all statements are binary, nor assign a burden to those whop deny that all statements are binary.I think the form of Count Timothy von Icarus' statement is sufficient to shift the burden of proof onto the one who denies that it is a true binary. — Leontiskos
That's not how it looks to me. It looks more as if you have reached a conclusion and are looking for an argument that will hit it.It assumes we have some kind of target, but it does not assume that we have the conclusion. — Leontiskos
Not my experience in curriculum development or in building co-design. Indeed it seems to me that the cases in which we share a "target", beyond a vague agreement as to the direction we might head, are rare. Have you ever been in a conversation were what was at issue was, what will we do? Not all inquiry is about hitting a known mark; sometimes, it’s about discovering what might be worth doing or understanding together. That’s a different model—less like archery, more like building without a blueprint.But I think we must have a target for our construction. — Leontiskos
All of them.In what post did I advance this "argument?" — Count Timothy von Icarus
And yet non-classical logics are coherent. Non-classical logics, such as paraconsistent logics, do allow for contradictions without collapse, and they are mathematically coherent and well-developed.Indeed, if the principle of non-contradiction cannot be specified as a general epistemic principle then it seems obvious that contradiction is allowed. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Tim's objection, so far as I can make sense of it, is that if we allow a case in which it remains undecided if some sentence is true or false, then the concatenation of sentences contains a contradiction and anything goes. — Banno
All of them.
And yet non-classical logics are coherent. Non-classical logics, such as paraconsistent logics, do allow for contradictions without collapse, and they are mathematically coherent and well-developed.
Ok. So I've misunderstood you.I don't think I suggested anything remotely like this. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Let's focus on this in the hope of reaching some agreement.Tim's objection, so far as I can make sense of it, is that if we allow a case in which it remains undecided if some sentence is true or false, then the concatenation of sentences contains a contradiction and anything goes. — Banno
I am saying that claims like: "Bin Laden was the leader of the 9/11 attacks" and "he was also not involved with them at all," should indicate that at least one cannot be true — Count Timothy von Icarus
Stating that all statements are binary does not show that all statements are binary, nor assign a burden to those whop deny that all statements are binary.
Either all narratives are acceptable/true/valid, whatever you want to call it, or they aren't. If some aren't, in virtue of what are some to be rejected?
Whatever. Seems to me that just repeats the same error.
If we allow a case in which it remains undecided if some sentence is true or false, then do we have a contradiction?
What's an example of an "undecided" historical or scientific fact? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Either OJ Simpson really killed his wife or he didn't. — Count Timothy von Icarus
but is a violation of LEM. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I mean, what's the point here re epistemology? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Not necessarily. We might not be denying a position, and not affirming it, but leaving it undecided.Well, in ruling out, "anything goes," you are denying some positions. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Not necessarily. We might not be denying a position, and not affirming it, but leaving it undecided.
You can no doubt see where I am going.
So a decision made for no reason at all isn't arbitrary?
"It isn't 'anything goes.' Why doesn't something go you ask? I can offer no reason/principle/criteria to justify why some things don't go."
It's an error to call that arbitrary?
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