As I said, there are many words that have several meanings and require further clarification in some situations. Atheist works fine in a great deal of contexts, even if we do not know if the person denies the existence of gods or simply lacks a belief. This is language it is a floppy, ambiguous thing and even the grammar stakes paradigmatic claims without proof.Okay...but what if I use the word one way and someone else uses it another way. Do we put its "proper" use up to a vote next election? — Frank Apisa
If one needs to know, ask. If one wants to clarify, clarify. I don't see how claiming that the atheists are using the word wrong resolves the conflict. Does that approach seem to be getting converts to your preferred usage?Not being a wise ass here, Coben...just asking a way to resolve such situations. — Frank Apisa
First of all, there is a difference between suggesting that we change the meaning with a supporting why we should change it, and telling people they are wrong to use it the way they are, when in fact they are following current usage. I have already said that I think that is fine. This is different from telling people their use is wrong because really dictionaries are wrong and current use, generally, is wrong due to etymology. Language changes and current use is not wrong. So, now moving on to the next issue is it better to use it the way you would like.My opinion is that is absurd...a use of the word in a way that is much less useful than defining it as "a person who denies that any gods exist" or "a person who asserts it is more likely that no gods exist than that at least one does." — Frank Apisa
where the original meaning might not even clarify a belief or lack of one.In early ancient Greek, the adjective átheos (ἄθεος, from the privative ἀ- + θεός "god") meant "godless". It was first used as a term of censure roughly meaning "ungodly" or "impious". In the 5th century BCE, the word began to indicate more deliberate and active godlessness in the sense of "severing relations with the gods" or "denying the gods".
But the moment you actually start criticizing it's infinite, call it regress or progress. You will have to stop (to make dinner, to live) before resolving its own criteria. Only radical skeptic justificationists do not recognize that we find ourselves in the middle of life and already having beliefs. They also pick and choose, just like a critical rationalist has to, how much to criticize (and thus form even more beliefs), how time to put in, how to prioritize which beliefs to go after and so on.It lets you believe whatever right off the bat, but then says to never stop trying to refine those beliefs to better and better ones. — Pfhorrest
You still missing the point. With that criterion that I've now quoted three times, you cannot do anything but criticize beliefs. Whether you are refining or not. Whether you don't care about the bottom or not. I'll quote it a fourth time....But looking for more and more buoyant things to float on doesn’t have that problem; you’ll still never find a perfectly buoyant thing that will definitely keep you afloat forever, but at least you can make do with whatever you’ve found so far instead of sinking straight to the bottom looking in vain for something solid to stand on. — Pfhorrest
Everytime you criticize you generate new beliefs, more than one for each belief you criticize. To live up to that you have an infinite process.Instead only try to criticize whatever beliefs you should find yourself have
Beliefs don't have to be certain - as you've said yourself, one can be open to revision, but they are still beliefs -, nor are they in justification or most other epistemologies. You checked your belief (you believe) and now believe there wasn't a problem. That's two beliefs at least you just accumulated when there wasn't even a (n apparant) problem. Now the process would need to go on. Each time with a branching set of new beliefs.I think this is where you're losing the point. Criticizing your beliefs isn't some kind of final permanent thing. You look to see if there are any problems; if you don't see any, you can keep it. — Pfhorrest
Instead only try to criticize whatever beliefs you should find yourself having.
And none of us are arguing that one cannot or shouldn't get meaning out of it.↪Metaphysician Undercover
Right, this was the point I was making. Fundamentally art is something to get inspiration from, not something to get meaning from. However, this does not mean that art is something we cannot get meaning from.
I can't see where there is a disagreement between us. — Punshhh
Right, I got that. But if you decide a belief might be a problem, then you generate beliefs. First, that it might be a problem, then that you evaluation to keep it or get rid of it is sound, then whatever subevalutations in there.Yes, when you can, and if you don't see anything wrong with a particular belief yet, you can leave it for now and run with what you have. You don't have to prove that every belief you hold is completely immune to all possible criticism before you do anything; that would be justificationism again, and you could never get started at all. — Pfhorrest
Also, even if it didn't hold up, I would be free on that account to continue holding that belief anyway, because that would be the rejection of all rationalism. — Pfhorrest
Are you sure that's why you do that? The moment you draw any conclusion, in your version of critical rationalism, you have a new belief? Then you must, according to the rule I quoted twice, check to see if there is any problem with it. Then you have new belief that you evaluated well that there is no problem. Then....Fruit of the poisoned tree only applies to justificationist reasoning. A critical rationalist doesn't argue for critical rationalism on the grounds of something else -- critical rationalism is against that sort of thing -- it's just what's left after ruling out other self-defeating possibilities, like justificationism and fideism. — Pfhorrest
The difference between surviving criticism and bring justified from the ground up is that surviving criticism is the default state of any belief, whereas nothing is automatically justified-from-the-ground-up To begin with, all beliefs have survived the (zero) criticism they have been subjected to thus far — including belief in critical rationalism. — Pfhorrest
So you start a critique...well you have to beleive you have a belief - you could critique that. When you are critiquing a belief, you have to critique all the facets of the critique, since these will include beliefs and then that you identified the beliefs correctly, then any conclusions you draw are new beliefs....it doesn't matter if it's justification or not, you are still critiquing which will involve identifying beliefs, a process, beliefs aobut a good process conclusions and more. it has to have a regress.Instead only try to criticize whatever beliefs you should find yourself having.
Precisely, there is an infinite regress if one truly follows the protocols of critical rationalism. Note that deciding there is a good reason, or not, would entail a belief. believing that one notices good reasons. And on and on. But note you are not really doing critical rationalism. You are doing your own idiosyncatic version. Which is fine. But it seems to me what you are saying is you simply don't follow through on the implications. One can do this with justification also. Have some axioms.Consider actions for analogy. Should we do nothing until we can justify from the ground up that that thing is the one absolutely certain best thing to do, or should we instead do whatever we want unless there is some good reason not to do that particular thing, and then instead do whatever else isn’t ruled out yet? Obviously the latter, or else we would never do anything at all. — Pfhorrest
Critical rationalists hold that scientific theories and any other claims to knowledge can and should be rationally criticized, and (if they have empirical content) can and should be subjected to tests which may falsify them. Thus claims to knowledge may be contrastingly and normatively evaluated.
Does the question of free will matter? — Example24
One: To the people who point to dictionaries on this issue, it should be noted that dictionaries do not truly define words. They tell us how they are most often used…at a particular period of time. — Frank Apisa
then you have to criticize each belief, then the belief that you should criticize every belief, then the beliefs that led you to think that you should criticize every beleif and so on. And then criticize each belief you form during the critique session about a particular belief - like 'my belief seems problematic because of X', but then I must critique my belief that it seems problematic because of X AND my belief that X is the case and so on. And then critical rationalism needs to be criticized, if you believe in it, but can one use a belief to critique a belief. IOW whatever epistemology you have to determine if a belief is ok, this will be the one you will use to check to see if that epistemology itself is ok. Which is fruit of the poisoned tree. And by the way, I am not saying we cannot have knowledge. I am just looking at your criterion and applying it to your own beliefs and I see infinite regress here too.Instead only try to criticize whatever beliefs you should find yourself having.
Every guess, supposition, or estimate SHOULD be subject to change
Yes, I don't know how you've lasted so long. And the problem is things like this...What's amusing here is we have 3 actual artists trying to demonstrate these aspects of our work, and then we have 1 (apparently) non-artist attempting to explain to us that we're wrong about our experience of our work. This is getting boring, to be honest. — Noble Dust
...do not contradict what we are saying. Yes, an artist has insights into his or her work. On the other hand so do other viewers of that art. A smart artist will not want to narrow down the range of insights or put other viewers in the position of having to overcome the artist's necessarily limited set of insights about that work. Further as we have pointed out repeatedly it's pressing the mental verbal mind to the immediate prioritized fore by having the artist's statment. You want people to have a felt and sensual experience and telling them what to think and feel diminishes this and its range and actually sets the wrong portions of the brain going when first encountering a piece of art. The idea of the art is not just to generate thinking. At least it used to be. Now you can go to museums and see whole shows which are primarily about generating ideas - with sensual and aesthetic facets radically diminished over other kinds of shows. That would be fine if one had to choose between aesthetic and meaning/conceptual factors, but you don't. So we have diminished one facet of great art for no reason. The occasional piece that does this could be and has been an interesting contrast, and those first artists who did this often created a powerful effect. But that this has become more of a rule is a loss. And the artist's statement is a side effect.The artist, as one's own observer has inside information on one's own piece, — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not sure that such a shift in vocabulary actual influences how much you trust the ideas. I assume a wide range of meanings to my own use of 'belief'. It's something I think is the case, but I am not sure. This can be anything from my best guess, so I choose path b cause I think that's where we came from, but I am not remotely sure, to beliefs that I am very confident in, that have worked for a long time, but I am open to revision around.The key to getting rid of all that "belief" nonsense (whether of the shakable or unshakable variety) is simply not to corrupt our guesses, suppositions, estimates and the like...by using the word "belief" as a disguise. — Frank Apisa
The artist would through the entire process be an observer, and one contruction with some but not total freedom the experienced artwork and affected by it. And strong artists are surprised and frustrated by their art, which always will go beyond the conscious mind's ability to control and will always have meanings and implications the artist did not intend, EVEN for him or herself as a viewer. And artists should be wary of saying what their art means, because they are not aware of what in them has affected the art. I've gone back to old work and realized, much later, that it clearly dealt with, for example, family issues I was not thinking of at all when I made it. And I have also denied certain interpretations of my art, only much later to realize the other person was very likely quite correct. The intentions in the conscious mind are only a small part of what is going on. Another reason the artist statement - if it goes into any of these areas - is confused about art and their own minds.This is the falsity which you refuse to acknowledge. No audience is required. The artist can create without an observer. The art exists with or without the observer. Your "philosophical concept" is faulty. — Metaphysician Undercover
But the question isn't really if once could potentially shakes someone's belief, the question is really if gravity is shakeable for you. And note that your point one is arguing that our understanding of gravity might not be correct, but that doesn't mean that one doubts there is gravity. And yes, empirical 'things' can be doubted, but do you ever doubt gravity? If not, then so far at least it seems unshakable for you.#1
Our understanding or conceptualizing gravity might be false, or deficient to be true.(ie. not a pulling or pushing force, but a combination of both, or note even a force) — Monist
Does knowing it or believing it make it true, — Harry Hindu
He did say this to me, don't know if he did to you. I thought it was odd that he now was explaining a position that was more radical than ours, after we defended a more modest co-creation model. I do understand that he is adding in this idea of phenomenologically (and one could actually argue NEUROGOLICALLY it is the case) and so he didn't think he was conceding anything, since he thought we were arguing, somehow, that the viewer actually made the physical sculture, say. But it seems like having this idea, he could have responded to us in a much less dismissive way. I did respond to his 100 percent idea and disagreed with it, while thinking and saying that argument has merit. Given that what we create in our minds will defnitely carry over relationships between parts in the physical artwork, color patterns and more from the original, even if some of these are qualia - since the artist also experiences quaiia he or she is presenting us they tried and true dyanmics with and between qualia -, we are not just being stimulated and then freely doing whatever with the original. What we, yes, create in our minds, is controlled and led in many ways by the physical artwork. I can certainly concede. and did. that fifty percent is a stab in the dark, but it represents to me the idea that we co-create the experience of the artwork. It is not the same as sitting in a dark room and making up a painting just in our minds. That virtual image in the mind is something based very much on the artwork, though feelings, portions of the painting that we focus on, our own unconscious associations and more come from our, the viewers side. That to me is a kind of cocreation. And one that many artists want to have happening. In fact, I have been working on a play. When writing plays you want to avoid writing on the nose, you want subtext, and the better plays are filled with subtext, with just the occasional, often climactice moments where on the nose statements arise. Why? Because on the nose does not allow for the audience to co-create as much. It tries to eliminate this cocreation. It can't of course, given that our minds must recreate the play inside us. But it limits this cocreation as much as it can. It is similar, in a way, to the artist statement.Remember, I said that you are solely responsible for the creation of your own phenomenological experience of the art, the artist plays no role in this. — Metaphysician Undercover
When did you say this? I seem to remember Coben calling you out on a phenomenological issue, rather than you concocting one. Bullshit. — Noble Dust
'Reasons' they obviously have. They need it to be true, they heard from their best friend, it makes sense to them, they read it in a scientific journal, they saw it happen, they think being uncertain is weak...and so on. They are saying they have no doubt. They may have doubt. They may know deep down that they are not really certain. They may have good grounds. They may not. They make be the kind of person who trusts their intuition (and shouldn't). Some people are just certain in general. Some are certain when they have good evidence. It varies subject to subject. When someone is certain this does not indicate anything about epistemology, theirs or in general. It's a mental state or a measure of one. It measure a lack of doubt or the presentation of that. Of course each person will likely think that their certainty is based on good reasons, but that is not what they are saying when they use the term.It seems like you're saying that one can be certain without any reasons or evidence for what they are certain about. — Harry Hindu
Oh, yes it is. They just don't use it that way when describing themselves. But they do when describing others. And I am saying what the term is referring to. It is referring to an emotional state.That isn't how I or anyone else uses the term, "certainty" — Harry Hindu
To be certain means that you put forth some mental effort to parse some bit of information for logical and empirical consistency before you say that you are certain of something. — Harry Hindu
Truth: property of a proposition.
Fact: what exists in the world. — David Mo
The knowledge database of religious advisories keeps growing every day. Look for example just at this one site: https://islamqa.info/en . Every time there is a question, an attempt is made to discover a suitable jurisprudential advisory that syntactically entails from scripture.
However, saying that all issues have been clarified by the scriptures would be equivalent to saying that all theorems and their justification are discovered already when publishing the axioms of a theory.
It took 350 years to discover the justification from number theory for Fermat's Last Theorem. So, knowledge discovery is not necessarily an easy thing in a formal system. It could be a lot of hard work. — alcontali
which is nto really a philosophical issue.For example, don't ask it to predict the weather. — alcontali
If artist's statements are more a rule than an exception then it might be a very big hint that the task of making the art speak for itself is either very difficult or maybe even impossible. — TheMadFool
They can, and I would fight to allow them. I see it as a bad trend, and as an increasing trend. Part of a trend towards a diminishment of investment into the sensual aspects of art and a seeing art as getting messages and ideas across as the main idea. Since a beautiful work can do this just as well, as one put together with one with less skill, this means a general trend to a net loss.why can't artists have the corresponding artist's statement? — TheMadFool
INdividual cases may vary. But the tendency to want to control rather than stimulate/inspire thoughts shown in a trend towards greater use of artist statements, coupled with the tendency to have artwork that relies less on the sensual experience and is conceived of as something, yes, to convey information, to set certain mental verbal thoughts going, is to me a loss. I would never tell an artist not to do it. It might be perfect for a certain work of art. But to me it feels like a trend towards losing out on the sensual in deference to the verbal WHEN ONE NEED NOT choose if one has talent. You can convey incredible amounts information AND make something beautiful a broad sense of that term. But to get the skills to make something that is beautiful, you need to train your ass off, not just train your thinky little brainpan.I think in general it shows a trend away from the beautiful, for no good reason, and a desire to have specific thoughts in brains. To me that's what non-fiction books are for or opinion pieces in newpapers.With that out of the way, an artist's statement, if but an explanation, in some ways reflects a deficiency, a deficiency in the artwork itself which compels the artist to furnish the so-called artist's statement to, in effect, correct the image his/her work evokes in the minds of his audience to match his/her own. It may be wrong to call this a deficiency though. — TheMadFool
If you are that particular kind of theist and you think all philosophical issues have been clarified by that kind of deity in a particular text. And, everyone else is. If you do not have that version of a deity or do not think that the deity has answered al philosophical questions, then there is a lot to discuss. And only more so, if others are not that kind of theist or theists at all. Given that so many issues are not resolved by scripture or revelation, there is tremendous room for discussion. A philosophy of language issues for example - of course it might impinge on scripture and hermeneutics, but then even that's a potential discussion....because if there is an all-knowing, all-seeing and all-powerful being, then the answer to every philosophical question becomes "Because God Says". — Banno
I made a much more complicated argument than that and the whole point is that the person is doing it in verbal manner when, most cases, the art form itself is not verbal. I am pretty sure I said this a number of times and then pointed out my specific issues with this. But here you sum me up in a position that is not remotely a charitable interpretation of mine, for example as expressed here...As I told Noble Dust, this is all nonsense to me. The artist's act of creating the piece of art is an obvious attempt to affect your "work of art experience". If you reject the artist's statement on this basis, that the artist is attempting to have an affect on your experience of the artwork, then you might as well reject all artwork as well, because that's what artwork is, an attempt to affect your work of art experience — Metaphysician Undercover
No worries...it was this part...But you can't tell me what I know. — Coben
Of course not. Sorry if anything I wrote sounded like I did. — TheMadFool
[my emphasis]You know very well that an afterlife is essentially thrusting the begging bowl of desire in eternity's face. — TheMadFool
Sure, each of us does "an incredible amount of work". But that work is not part of the work of the artist — Metaphysician Undercover
It's analogous to two of us looking at the landscape in front of us. The landscape is beautiful. If I point out a bird, and say "look at that bird at the top of that tree", this does not negate the overall beauty of the landscape — Metaphysician Undercover
Which we don't experience, the physical piece. We experience what is inspired and triggered in our minds. Taking some sense stimuli, not others, with our attendant emotions and conscious and unconscious associations saturating the experience. If it is representational, then we have associations on a number of levels affecting what we experience and how we experience it. Our eyes scan the painting, say, and do not take in the whole thing at once. We interact and react to the the specific style with a wealth of conscious and mainly unconscious reactions. These experiences are going to be radically different person to person, and much of hard to put into words or even notice.But that's simply wrong, the "work" is the physical piece, not the psychological affect — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, actually I don't. But this point is tangential to what I was saying. I was pointing out that this 'meaninglessness' is not present.You know very well that an afterlife is.... — TheMadFool
I'm happy to admit that finding the proper language to express this concept is difficult, and this is leading to confusion, although I get the feeling that you won't be charitable to that fact (I hope I'm wrong); but never the less. When I say "the viewer is 50% of the work", I'm saying that metaphorically, not mathematically. If I was saying it mathematically, clearly I'd be wrong and you would be correct in your critique. — Noble Dust
The point is that when you make claims such as "the viewer is half the work", you need to support these principles. If you support them with faulty math then there is no support. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, I was responding the framing the issue in terms of time. Note the references to 'when you're dead' 'temporary' and so on in the post I was responding to. So, I responded in terms of time.Now is a temporal concept. What does it mean to say that the now is, as you say, filled with meaning? I thought we were discussing people and the desire for meaning to life and not a subdivison of time, the now? — TheMadFool
Yes, people have that reaction. I was shifting focus, in that post, to the meaning that is present. One need not follow that line of logic, or 'logic', that even if death is the end of life then there really is no meaning. Because that is letting something imagined, that is not experienced and is not real yet, determine if there is meaning now. And, don't take this as if I think this is necessarily easy to do or I have not sympathy for that line of thought. But it is a line of thought and not necessarily a line one must argue or think.Also, what you say seems to go against the grain for death seems to be peoples' primary reason for the perceived meaninglessness of life. — TheMadFool
Sure, but in the name of clamouring for eternity, another thing I certainly empathize deeply with, they are saying that now has no meaning.it's actually eternity that people are clamoring for. — TheMadFool
Then, regardless, you'll never experience meaninglessness. Because in all moments of experiences things will have meaning to you. Pain, loss of love, love, a new ______ [fill in the blank], unpleasant work, small victories, small set backs, getting a better quaility ice cream cone, really being listened to, being ignored.....Even if life has meaning, this meaning simply floats away into nothingness with the cessation of life which as we all know is a certainty — TheMadFool