I would point to capital, and the drive of the wealthy to increase their share of capital, on the backs of workers. — rlclauer
I understand you are critical of the state and the type of education on offer at the moment, but do you agree with this one point? To put it even simpler: good conditions generally improve outcomes and vice versa. In my opinion that is not controversial. In fact there is a mountain of evidence to support that claim. — rlclauer
f your "poor victims" didn't preach indoctrinate proselytize mutually inconsistent superstitions day in and day out, then there wouldn't be a whole lot of Hitchens'ses around to disabuse those postulates. — jorndoe
I view humans as acting out their behavior which was determined since childhood, which is why I emphasized education as a means to assist people in realizing their potential. — rlclauer
Metaphysicians do not use any specific system, it is more like intuition, so metaphysics appears to be random nonsense to the uninitiated. — Metaphysician Undercover
f, for simplicity sake, we generalize and call this intuition, then we have something named, which we can discuss, and analyze toward understanding it. — Metaphysician Undercover
We can say now, that principles, axioms, are not chosen arbitrarily, but they are chosen by intuition. Intuition would assess the applicability of various possible principles, in relation to various goals, ends. — Metaphysician Undercover
Anything more on offer more central to the OP, the philosophy of Software Engineering? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
The philosophy of software engineering? Oh boy, that sounds exciting. Where do I sign up? — S
In partial agreement with you but there's one area of philosophical argumentation that Hitchen's Razor is extremely useful viz. the issue with burden of proof. I'm familiar with it from the God debate (theism/atheism). — TheMadFool
I do not have a dog in this fight, but it seems like Quod grātīs asseritur, grātīs negātur is valid. I can claim there is intelligent life on 23 planets, but I make this claim without evidence. There are quite a few planets that MIGHT POSSIBLY host life of some sort, and there is evidence for that claim. But there is no evidence at all for the claim that 23 planets host intelligent life. So you can say, "No there are not." — Bitter Crank
I am suggesting while that yes there is definitely uniqueness to each person, if given the right education, diet, and living in a society which is safe and contains opportunity for them, they will be dramatically different, and for the better. — rlclauer
Which is why this razor wouldn’t affect it — khaled
It gets used broadly now in philosophical discussions. So even if the original was aimed at one issue, it is used in general. — Coben
So you're off your reservation with the wrong opinions on the wrong topics on and about which you don't have adequate information, knowledge, or understanding. And predictably, you're thereby dismissive and defensive - very weak stances from the standpoint of rhetoric. Of course from your area, it's simpler: you're just plain wrong. — tim wood
In my opinion, much of these outcomes are the products of the structure of the society, and other factors which have nothing to do with someone's merit or lack thereof. — rlclauer
Of course people prefer to live in comfort rather than a pile of garbage, but the whole subject I am trying to get at, is what produces these outcomes? — rlclauer
Hence, I believe changing the way the economy is structured from the ground up can generate more equality from the starting point, which will translate to more equality at the finishing line, and I believe considering how individuals are constrained or propelled by their circumstances is a good way to see that the current system generates illegitimate hierarchies. — rlclauer
Fair enough, then. You know nothing whatever about rhetoric or its subjects. Your subjects are all apodeictic — tim wood
Agreed, Hitchens's razor is a pig in the parlor of mathematics, but in rhetoric a fine and useful tool. And in rhetoric, your "axioms" (quotes because yours is a term of art) non-sequiturs. — tim wood
When there is an accumulation of gross wealth at the top, deaths of despair and, for the first time in the history of developed countries, decreasing life spans in many regions, and the rise of populism, I think to say it is working just fine is highly inaccurate. — rlclauer
Unless what you mean by "working just fine" is, "well me and the people I care about still got our paychecks," then if that's what you mean, sure, I could see why you would think that way. — rlclauer
This is Procrustean - and a variety of category error. Your "axiom" is clearly a term of art, properly restricted to its limited area. Which "area" has nothing whatever to do with Hitchens's razor or its applicability. Perhaps you've slipped on the various distinctions to be made in the meaning and usage of the word "axiom." And is my assumption about your understanding of rhetoric reasonable? It appears not to be. — tim wood
All the razor is doing is saying: sure you can start with this axiom, or this one, or that one, as long as there’s no evidence for them they’re all equally worthless. — khaled
Here's a definition: "Axiom definition, a self-evident truth that requires no proof." — tim wood
Have you perhaps slipped on the distinction between evidence of and proof of? — tim wood
The English version is: What is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence and is attributed to the famous atheist late Christopher Eric Hitchens (13 April 1949 – 15 December 2011). — TheMadFool
"Irrational" refers to an incommensurable ratio. This means that the two things being related to each other cannot be measured by the same system of measurement, such as the examples I gave you, the circumference and diameter of a circle, as well as the sides of a square and it's hypotenuse. What this indicates is that there is incommensurability between one spatial dimension and another. — Metaphysician Undercover
You mean the problem can be solved by hiding the infinite regress behind "complicated operations". A good metaphysician is trained to recognize such sophistry. — Metaphysician Undercover
We need some intuition as to which of the proposable principles are credible. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is where new knowledge comes from, determining errors in the old knowledge, not from introducing new proposals and checking for consistency with the old. A new proposal which is inconsistent with the old knowledge is not necessarily wrong, it could be that the old knowledge is wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think it is possible for us to have a stimulating conversation about the outcomes of individual lives within our current economic and political system. — rlclauer
When the two sides of a right angle are of equal length, the hypotenuse is irrational. Therefore the Pythagorean theorem as a first principle of geometry is deficient. Pythagoras himself grappled with this problem, and the fact that he could not resolve it bothered him. That the hypotenuse remains irrational indicates that the Pythagorean theorem remains unproven, just like the value of pi remains unproven.
If the rules are arbitrarily chosen then why choose a rule which results in the contradiction which is an irrational ratio? The fact is that the rules are not really chosen arbitrarily, they are chosen for purpose, pragmatics. The circle is useful, and pi is the result of the rule which creates the circle. The right angle is useful for making parallel lines, and the Pythagorean theorem is the result of the rule which creates the right angle. That each of these results in an irrational ratio indicates that they are lacking in truth and reality, despite the fact of being very useful. — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually, telescopes came after it was theorized that the earth revolved around the sun, and not vise versa, so understanding the heliocentric nature of the solar system was not the result of telescopes. The idea was floated around 2500 years ago, but the planets were given perfect circular orbits according to the principles of Aristotelian metaphysics. The assumption of perfect circles resulted in inconsistencies which could not be reconciled until Copernicus. The point though, is that metaphysical theory preceded the fine tuning observations which were required to adjust the theory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course, that's the nature of knowledge. Proceeding from the first principle has a similar problem,. There's no infinite regress, just some degree of uncertainty within knowledge, such that knowledge is forever evolving as we move forward. — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, now the point is that someone must determine the rules, the law. It makes no sense, to argue as you do, that all respectable knowledge proceeds from first principles in an axiomatic way, because this neglects the fact that someone must determine the principles, in the first place, from which the axiomatic knowledge will proceed. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you assume that all of the first principles for all divisions of knowledge have already been produced, this contradicts your original statement above, that we cannot know it's really "true", and therefore we must keep searching, in an endless way. You can't argue both sides of the contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is bullshit is your claim that there has been no progress in metaphysics in 2500 years. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you think that human beings developed the current knowledge of the solar system, and the rest of the universe, by following the principles which were accepted 2500 years ago? — Metaphysician Undercover
You're smart in one area and a delusional bullshit artist when you talk to me. You got busted. Give it a rest. — fishfry
LOL. One (you, me, anyone) would need a Ph.D. in set theory and several years of specialized postdoc work just to read what he's done so far. You keep making this laughable claim that you'll deign to read his work when he's done. You're embarrassing yourself. — fishfry
Again the reality of those concepts are not the job of mathematics, it is the consequential load in those rule following games that is mathematics. — Zuhair
I corrected some of your errors and you started making wild extrapolations of things you didn't understand. — fishfry
What in God's name difference does it make if JTB or TB is true? Who has ever cared about that other than a few people with too much time on their hands? Who cares how we define knowledge? This is probably what the professor in the OP was talking about - this is the kind of crap philosophers are forced to waste their time on. — T Clark
That's contradiction, "first" means first, the possibility of infinite regress is therefore excluded. — Metaphysician Undercover
Unless you can justify this claim, it's nothing more than an opinion of an uneducated person. — Metaphysician Undercover
I gave you the example, moral ethics ... I see, morality is nonsense to you. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm always up for a chat about set theory but this ain't it. — fishfry
If Woodin said that he's "not finished," he means he's not finished with his decades-long research project. — fishfry
He's got plenty of published proofs, he's one of the top set theorists in the world. — fishfry
our comment that there's nothing on Wikipedia because he doesn't have a finished proof is, I apologize for my directness, laughable. — fishfry
That's your strategy. Avoiding knowledge. — fishfry
all the foundational level work has been done — RogueAI
I think he was right. The original stuff has already been thought of. There's been too many smart people for anyone to have missed anything fundamental by now. We need new perspectives. — RogueAI
But metaphysics is reasoning toward first principles, not reasoning from first principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
But to study morality, as a field of study within philosophy, is a process by which we seek to determine those rules. — Metaphysician Undercover
but the metaphysician reasons toward determining first principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
Empiricism is about correspondence and Mathematics is about consequence. — Zuhair
Logical positivist used the verificationism principle to regard metaphysical statements as meaningless, would you go along that belief ? — Wittgenstein
We find out what axiomatic systems give what conclusions, but notice that the conclusions that we desire are the motivating feature in this diagram. — fdrake
Pure formalism just gives you the black arrows, it does not give the sense of mathematical progress through the articulation and codification of ideas, just the dynamics of symbols, as if the ideas motivating them were completely irrelevant. Another way of putting it: formalism is just what we invent to get to where we need to go. — fdrake
I in opposition to your terminology prefer to use the term truth to denote another context which is quite different from the "correspondence with reality" context, and that context is what I've labeled as "consequential truth", you are free not to call it truth, you may term it as "consequentiality", or "consequential processing" which are fair enough. — Zuhair
If by polymorphism you mean that truth can take different forms, I disagree, because on my definition, "truth" is defined to accommodate all forms, as qualified, because that is the best it can do. — tim wood
And I cannot think of a fundamentally ambiguous situation. — tim wood
Any form of reflection on the "world" or "states of affairs" concerns facts, and facts are always historical. Are you prepared to assert that all facts are true - without some weird question-begging qualification? — tim wood
My own definition of truth, fwiw, is that "truth" is an abstract term that simply means that the proposition in question complies with an appropriate standard in being true, while being entirely agnostic as to what that standard is. — tim wood
imagine that you have an idea of a structure you want to capture the behaviour of, and you have the behaviour — fdrake
If ever you've tried to axiomatise a structure you'd see that there's a reciprocality between the structure's concept and its mathematical definition. — fdrake
