When you're happy to allow some words the privilege of being ok to assume both people writing mean the same thing by them...
It beggars belief, that's all. — fdrake
aletheist
1.3k
Charles Peirce was an incredibly intelligent man...but he simply missed the boat on this issue.
— Frank Apisa
I suspect that your view on this is much closer to his than you realize. If a purported belief makes no difference whatsoever in our conduct, then it is not a real belief, just empty words. — aletheist
fdrake
3.3k
Okay, I was a bit abrupt there. Question like that seem to be a stalling or diverting tactic.
— Frank Apisa
What do you mean by "I" and "was" and "question"?
...assume I meant that same thing...
— Frank Apisa
If you can do this, then the OP unasks itself. — fdrake
fdrake
3.3k
What do you mean by "what?"
— Frank Apisa
What do you mean by "what", "do", "you", "mean", "by" and "what"? — fdrake
fdrake
3.3k
What do you mean by "mean" in the OP question? — fdrake
fdrake
3.3k
What do you mean by "mean" in the OP question? — fdrake
Borraz
18
↪Frank Apisa
"The use of the word "believe" for hunch, or guess, or estimate, or so many other words is fine...except there are times when it makes more sense to use "the other words.""
Okay. Everybody speaks about physics and math. — Borraz
A Seagull
326
where the words "believe/belief" rear their ugly heads
— Frank Apisa
Well I find the words belief, believe extremely useful and meaningful.
Your beliefs are what you believe, they are the ideas you hold in your head. — A Seagull
aletheist
1.3k
Obviously I disagree in total with Peirce.
— Frank Apisa
Why do you disagree? — aletheist
And why would that be obvious?
charles ferraro
111
↪Frank Apisa
I'm not doing anything, nature does it. I think it's pretty well empirically settled that we will all die at some point, isn't it? — charles ferraro
charles ferraro
110
↪TheMadFool
I assure you, in the most personal way, ultimately, there will be nothing rather than something for each one of us. — charles ferraro
aletheist
1.3k
↪Frank Apisa
As usual, I will offer something from Charles Sanders Peirce, in this case his somewhat famous definition of a belief as a habit of conduct.
And what, then, is belief? It is the demi-cadence which closes a musical phrase in the symphony of our intellectual life. We have seen that it has just three properties: First, it is something that we are aware of; second, it appeases the irritation of doubt; and, third, it involves the establishment in our nature of a rule of action, or, say for short, a habit ... The essence of belief is the establishment of a habit; and different beliefs are distinguished by the different modes of action to which they give rise. If beliefs do not differ in this respect, if they appease the same doubt by producing the same rule of action, then no mere differences in the manner of consciousness of them can make them different beliefs, any more than playing a tune in different keys is playing different tunes.
— Peirce, 1878
As the old saying goes, "Actions speak louder than words"; what I truly believe is more reliably discerned from what I do than from what I say. — aletheist
3017amen
1.5k
↪Frank Apisa
Frank!
I think you could parse Belief a couple ways.
1. Belief could be defined as induction v. deduction. Having a belief in something infers something. It infers that a something exists. That, as apposed to a purely objective and/or universal truth, like mathematics, which exists in a deductive manner.
2. A Belief could comprise the following infamous Kantian judgement: all events must have a cause. The statement itself, if true, is something that would be beyond pure reason; both empirically and a priori/mathematical/deductively.
You probably already knew that! — 3017amen
tim wood
4k
Probably would be better to take that question over to the other thread, Tim.
— Frank Apisa
And why would that be, Frank? — tim wood
People get hunches based on their reasoning. If it becomes clearer the more I mull over it, I say I believe. I tend to say "I believe" for everything I currently think (there's the replacement work) because I am open to being wrong about everything — Gregory
tim wood
4k
Why is activity even better than passivity in any system?
— Gregory
Are you confusing actual with action? — tim wood
considering this an online forum, i have no basis to argue with you right now. If you have never met a decent religionist in the flesh, then i have no argument at this point. — christian2017
Pinprick
85
Each house of the Congress starts each session with prayers to "Almighty God"
— Frank Apisa
Is this true? If so, that is certainly a violation of the separation of church and state. — Pinprick
IvoryBlackBishop
276
For what it's worth, I was trying to be a little sardonic to prove a point, maybe I overdid and got too personal, I apologise. — IvoryBlackBishop
IvoryBlackBishop
274
↪Frank Apisa
Read Ray Dalio, Leaders Eat Last by Simon Sinek, or Meditations on Violence by Sgt. Rory Miller for a discussion of "power" that renders this dreck obsolete, just to name one serious author on the subject for people above a 6th grade reading level.
If the show was an actual discussion of power it wouldn't sell, nor would anyone seeking to understand the power in a more serious way be naive and childish enough to think that a trash TV show would just 'give it way for free, because they're nice guys and gals", without any "catch" or something... like Mephisto to Faust...
But hey, some people believe spam emails sent to them by "Nigerian princes" as a well, so I suppose there really are people dumb, ugly, and naive enough to believe a trash TV show is actually a "how-to" guide, lmao — IvoryBlackBishop
christian2017
965
They're out the maaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan!
— Christian
Ummm...what does that mean?
— Frank Apisa
It was a joke. Thats a common cliche from movies where the guy who appears to be a hippie and strung out on drugs says exactly that. I agree with my hippie friend that aliens probably do exist. — christian2017
christian2017
954
↪Frank Apisa
Perhaps you come from a different generation so you aren't familiar with "Do you believe in Aliens?" — christian2017
They're out the maaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan! — Christian
You asked me the question of why i didn't word it differently of "Do you believe in Aliens?" — christian2017
IvoryBlackBishop
270
↪Frank Apisa
It does. — IvoryBlackBishop
It's a trash show which isn't worth a serious discussion on the subject of power (except maybe to the underclass which I'm sure is and was it's target demographic, kind of like the journalist Robert Greene's silly books, which are allegedly more popular with convicted felons than with anyone actually in serious positions of power anyway, — Bishop
Which is what I was hoping for in this thread, a serious discussion, not having my eyes tainted with the ugliness in question. (I've got to meditate now to wash it out of mind, sigh). — Bishop
IvoryBlackBishop
269
↪Frank Apisa
Why do people watch Mystery Science Theater 3000?
Me, I found it a good example of the "mass psychology" which trash like Game of Thrones is marketed to, such as how the "negativity bias" which is hardwired into us causes us to disproportionately associate "negativity" with "realism", even when it's as "realistic" as a Jason, Saw or Freddy Krueger Move.
It's a show by ugly people, for ugly people, nothing more, perhaps even less. — IvoryBlackBishop
IvoryBlackBishop
267
↪Frank Apisa
Game of Thrones is as reliable and realistic source on the subject as a Jason Voorhes film. Didn't even bother to watch.
Having a reading level about the 6th grade, and an IQ above 95, or a society in which ugly people don't exist, would render the show unmarketable except as something to make fun of in "Mystery Science Theater". (Or as a source for even uglier and less realistic rip-offs like "Billions").
Go watch "Jason Goes To Hell: The Final Friday" on repeat for 500 hours straight (or the Jerry Springer Show, for that matter) if you want a slightly more realistic and intellectually stimulating version of the entire GoT series. — IvoryBlackBishop
christian2017
944
↪Frank Apisa
"Do you believe in aliens?" is equivalent to "Do you believe in cheese?". If you believe in cheese and or aliens than you either believe that aliens or cheese exist. How could i have worded that better? — christian2017
you should reconsider being my friend since we both believe in aliens. — christian2017
180 Proof
861
Another example of the Dunning-Kruger effect on stunning display ...
Occam's Razor...the kind of drivel that people who cannot truly reason use.
— Frank Apisa
:rofl:
“It can scarcely be denied that the supreme goal of all theory is to make the irreducible basic elements as simple and as few as possible without having to surrender the adequate representation of a single datum of experience.” ~Albert Einstein (1933)
"There never was a sounder logical maxim of scientific procedure than Ockham's razor: Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem. That is to say; before you try a complicated hypothesis, you should make quite sure that no simplification of it will explain the facts equally well." ~Charles Sanders Peirce (1903) — 180 Proof
Pfhorrest
1.5k
Knowledge is a kind of belief. — Pfhorrest
No it isn't.
— Frank Apisa
You evidently have no knowledge of philosophy whatsoever. "Justified true belief" has been the standard definition of "knowledge" (only recently challenged) for the past 2400 years or so. — Pfhorrest
[Why do people] ...almost NEVER use "guess" rather than "believe/belief?"
— Frank Apisa
Because we're not guessing. We're inferring. Maybe fallibly. We might be wrong. But we generally think we have reasons to believe the things we do. — Pfhorrest
Not at hand but the Jesuits were implicated as well as a section of the Vatican whose label I have forgotten that are charged with pushing the Vatican's ideology.
They have changed the name of that branch of late but it is still alive and well. — Gnostic Christian Bishop