The way I understand it is that concepts have meaning, and it’s not a matter of using a correct concept, but of using a concept correctly. — Noah Te Stroete
This makes sense to me. — Noah Te Stroete
You mentioned one failed business venture but didn’t mention any of the hundreds of successes. That’s clear suppression of contrary evidence. — NOS4A2
I can give you one example. The belief, now widespread, that Trump called neo-Nazis “very fine people”. This has already been thoroughly refuted, but no less still persists in the ant-Trumpist mind. — NOS4A2
I am always happy to learn. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I’m not so sure about that. Not very many stupid billionaires out there. — NOS4A2
Are you effected by their rhetoric? What effects does their rhetoric have on you? — NOS4A2
There isn't much to be suppressed though, is there?
Of course there is. Every gaffe or piece of wrong think is usually one or two words torn from thousands and then sensationalized. It’s quite a lucrative racket, but it leaves people uninformed. — NOS4A2
Well. There you go. — frank
There is not a "correct meaning of the word 'chair.'" — Terrapin Station
Rhetoric has no effect beyond a slight expelling of breath and sound. — NOS4A2
All that anti-Trump rhetoric on late night, much of it cherry picked from twitter, may work wonders on those who require an “applause” sign to remind them when to laugh. But they preach ant-Trumpism as a one-sided story, suppressing all evidence to the contrary. — NOS4A2
Concepts aren't correct or incorrect. — Terrapin Station
Too illiterate for me to bother responding to. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
You're interested in debating. I'm interested in having conversations. — Terrapin Station
Re an issue like this, this isn't something I'm going to think that I'm wrong about. — Terrapin Station
So debating with me about it, as if I'm going to change my mind, because you're going to present something to me that I hadn't thought about before, is probably going to be futile. — Terrapin Station
Also re conceding. How is that something that is done in a conversation where people are trying to understand each other?
Conceding is something you do in a competition. — Terrapin Station
It's supposed to be a conversation where we're trying to understand each other, no?
Why would you even look at that as something where "red herrings" could be introduced? — Terrapin Station
It just depends on how the conversation is going, if I think it's going. I was writing some longer posts, but this one fell apart when you ignored points I was making, ignored questions I was asking, and then after that, insisted that I answer something in a way that you preferred, or you wouldn't play. — Terrapin Station
Gnosis, Gnostic, root word for agnostic.
Need I say more? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
In my opinion discussions don't work when they're not easygoing/friendly, when people are trying to prove the other wrong rather than trying to understand them, and when one person gets too controlling. Hence why I make the moves I make when any of that stuff happens. — Terrapin Station
I agree it's boils down to psychology and social science in essence. But then you still have many (not all, it's not a uniform group in their thinking) transgenders insisting that they "really are" a woman/man. And that is a metaphysical claim, which they have (to my knowledge) never fully explained. — Artemis
If you have any resources that do explain it, I'd appreciate it if you provided them here instead of just waving nebulously into the wilds of the interwebs. :wink:
Oh, and I have met many transgender and gender fluid people. The latter tend to make more sensible claims, in my opinion. But apparently it's not good form to ask them to explain transgenderism. It's considered "questioning their existence." Which is unphilosophical, but, hey, that's what fora like this one are for. — Artemis
Of course I'm not just saying that. Haven't you been listening? I'm saying that when that's what's meant, and when you interpret that meaning accordingly, then that's correct, that's successful communication. Why the hell is that so difficult for you to a) understand, and b) acknowledge? You haven't given any sensible response to that.
— S
Can't you successfully communicate with someone using the word "correct" to refer to "a puppy" once they tell you that?
And they can successfully communicate with you using the conventional definition if they're familiar with it, etc. — Terrapin Station
And I'm still not going to read/respond to a bunch of different points/issues at a time when one is in the mood to argue with me. — Terrapin Station
First, it's not a digression. It's what I'm talking about. — Terrapin Station
But then you're not just saying that the dictionary or conventional definition of "correct" is "free from error; in accordance with fact or truth."
— Terrapin Station
Of course I'm not just saying that. Haven't you been listening? I'm saying that when that's what's meant, and when you interpret that meaning accordingly, then that's correct, that's successful communication. Why the hell is that so difficult for you to a) understand, and b) acknowledge? You haven't given any sensible response to that. — S
After they tell you, "I define 'correct' as 'a puppy,'" you're saying that the person needs to follow the convention.
— Terrapin Station
Only if they want to understand me! — S
Why should someone adhere to the consensus usage when they tell you they're using some odd definition, like "I define 'correct' as 'a puppy'"? — Terrapin Station
So "correct" has no normative or prescriptive weight in your usage here? — Terrapin Station
I'm saying that when that's what's meant, and when you interpret that meaning accordingly, then that's correct, that's successful communication. Why the hell is that so difficult for you to a) understand, and b) acknowledge? You haven't given any sensible response to that. — S
Can't you successfully communicate with someone using the word "correct" to refer to "a puppy" once they tell you that? — Terrapin Station
And they can successfully communicate with you using the conventional definition if they're familiar with it, etc. — Terrapin Station
But then you're not just saying that the dictionary or conventional definition of "correct" is "free from error; in accordance with fact or truth." — Terrapin Station
After they tell you, "I define 'correct' as 'a puppy,'" you're saying that the person needs to follow the convention. — Terrapin Station
And if you're not willing, you're incorrect? — Terrapin Station
You're not understanding something I've explained many times:
It's correct that the definition of "correct" above is "free from error; in accordance with fact or truth."
It's correct that that's a conventional definition.
That doesn't imply that it's correct to define "correct" as "free from error; in accordance with fact or truth." — Terrapin Station
It's a scope issue. The distinction is similar to the bound/unbound distinction.
In the one case, we're making a claim about what happens to be the case re popular usage, re what a dictionary says, etc. "Correct" is bound to those claims qua those claims--that is, what popular usage is, what the dictionary says, etc.
In the other case, it's an attempt to make an unbound claim--"It's not correct to define 'correct' as 'a type of puppy'" is not saying, "That's not what the dictionary says" or "That's not the conventional definition."
And in the unbound claim, there's an implication that one SHOULD follow conventions. That it's right to follow conventions. — Terrapin Station
And if as per S this all boils down to some pedantic notion regarding the term "correct", it really has been a waste fo time. — Baden
Again, the conventional definition of "correct" is NOT "conventional." — Terrapin Station
Communication simply depends on being able to understand others, which is a matter of being able to assign meanings to their utterances (say) in a manner that's coherent, consistent with their other past and future utterances, etc.
There's no need to bring the idea of "correct" into it.
Re the notion of definitions being correct or not, they're conventional or not. It's not incorrect to be conventional. The conventional definition of "correct" isn't "conventional." — Terrapin Station