There seem mainly two groups arguing in this thread. One is those who have not read any RGC but are quite sure his ideas are nonsense. And others who have read more-or-less but have not, more-or-less, understood what he is about with his absolute presuppositions. — tim wood
This is what happens when someone pushes the boundaries in proposing a concept, trying to assign to the concept, a function which is impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
Absolute presuppositions have no truth value. — T Clark
I don't see how this works in practice.
I don't see how one could see through a person's strategizing and cunning. — baker
Not according to ordinary usage, and what better determines the meaning of terms? — Janus
Function, function, function. As means of transportation, you can have it that cars and bicycles are the same. But they're different. Can you discern the differences? Which would you prefer to take to the store? — tim wood
Hey.....no fair confusing me, dammit!!! I had to go back through all my comments to see if I indicated absolute presuppositions were not presupposed, and I couldn’t find where I gave that indication. I’m arguing contrary to your claim that presuppositions are beliefs, which I emphatically reject on purely metaphysical grounds. So, no, there is no reason to think absolute presuppositions are not presupposed. In fact, it is no other way possible for them to be logically viable, then to be presupposed. — Mww
Yes, but these are relative presuppositions, — Mww
And so more and more I find myself attracted to the idea of a 10 yearish exit plan. I don't have any kids, so no strings there. I do have a wife, but she's beautiful and almost 10 years younger than me so she will find another partner. I am also completely honest with her about how I feel in terms of aging. I am thinking why not maximize the next 10 years and do what I REALLY want to do, instead of merely surviving. I have some savings due to a property I sold, and so could rent and work part-time at a low stress job (something related to cars which I love) and just live life to the fullest. Live the kind of free life I would likely live if I won the lottery. I would live in a cool light filled loft, drive an exotic car and just wake up and do whatever the fuck I want that day. — dazed
Agreed, and sustained in Prop. 5, “absolute presuppositions are not propositions”, and if not a proposition, cannot be considered in propositional form, which weighing and choosing would seem to require. — Mww
If belief is the consequence of some cognition relative to a thing in conjunction with a judgement made upon it with respect to the subjective validity of the cognition, it follows that presupposition does not lend itself to any of those cognitive faculties relating thought to an object, — Mww
Absolute presuppositions are not considered, weighed, and chosen, although some scientific theories do evolve them more consciously — tim wood
...different sets of absolute presuppositions correspond not only with differences in the structure of what is generally called scientific thought but with differences in the entire fabric of civilization.
(RGC, EM, ch 7, part 2) — Pantagruel
To me, the most important insight of Collingwood's essay is that absolute presuppositions are not facts. They are not true or false. They are useful or not useful in the particular situation in which we find ourselves. — T Clark
I think that faith relates to the effort required to produce belief. — Metaphysician Undercover
The underlying logic of this metaphysics is that the mind knows the forms immediately through intellecual intuition. — Wayfarer
I think this shows the difference of what tim wood, Collingwood, and I mean when we say absolute presupposition from what you do. It's not a fact. It's not true, but it's not false either. It has no truth value. If you want to call that a belief, ok, but it's misleading. — T Clark
f you cannot nor will not get it into your head that beliefs and presuppositions are not the same thing at all, then you don't get it. — tim wood
the idea that "absolute presuppositions are basically beliefs that function in a certain way," is as close to being dead wrong while still breathing as you can get — tim wood
Your "i.e., believed" then is yours and not RGC's. Yours a reading-into as opposed to a reading-out-of, and as such a misrepresentation - and a major misreading - of his thinking. Confusing - conflating - belief and presupposition in RGC's thinking simply a mistake. — tim wood
Ah, no. R.G. Collingwood's (RGC) ideas on metaphysics are simple and powerful. It is a shame to misunderstand them and get them wrong. — tim wood
What you refer to here is the act of believing, which is distinct from, and ought not be called "belief". — Metaphysician Undercover
That thing is a memory — Metaphysician Undercover
Everyone (except a few) believe in climate change.
Someone believes in the quality of this belief and then wants to make a difference. — javi2541997
So from personal experience, it seems that three stages exist: carelessness about knowledge, dabbling accumulation of fact such that a general picture of reality takes shape semiconsciously, and active synthesis for the sake of optimizing one's grasp of truth. The procession from one stage to the next is like a phase change in matter, — Enrique
I use it as a basis for looking at potential for research and for a reference for thinking through ideas. — Jack Cummins
So, probably, the epitome could be: being a believer in beliefs than can bring the power of act inside the world/society I live in. — javi2541997
To believe is to have an attitude of confidence toward your memory. Then a belief is the memory subjected to that attitude of confidence. — Metaphysician Undercover
All those words which you are applying in reference to your belief, "I am writing this now", require a memory of meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
Probably to reach the best goal everyone aspire = happiness — javi2541997