I don't think I want to go round again, even if you do. — unenlightened
Yeah, I hate that, like we're playing 'name that fallacy'. — Isaac
Trusting authority is a huge part of research.
— Outlander
It is the only currency of culture. Trust, or start civilisation again from scratch and alone. — unenlightened
I love these assertions without any kind of examples to back them up.Sometimes attacking the source is warranted.
Sometimes appealing to authority is appropriate. — frank
Quite so, but when you apply 'mending' to logic or words you lose the rigour of the logic and it becomes indistinguishable form non-logic. — A Seagull
Yes indeed. One of my very early suggestions was that to resolve a conflict we have to establish the conflict. — unenlightened
If I am not to be trusted in what I say, no amount of logic can resolve that. Our disagreement cannot even be expressed. — unenlightened
Exactly. The common ground is logic. If you refuse to use it, then there is no point in us having a discussion as I would never be able to understand your position to assert that I either agree or disagree.if one is unable to begin this dialogue with an equality and an engagement that will look for first common ground and then for the detail of disagreement, then it all becomes impossible. — unenlightened
Well, maybe Banno can explain how we know that we are talking about the same thing, and not talking past each other, when we disagree.As Banno tends to say, and rightly so, we agree on far more than we disagree. — creativesoul
The fresh start would be in addressing how we can disagree or agree on anything if what was said before contradicts what is said now?I'm thinking of this post as an attempt at a fresh start built upon pre-existing agreement(s). Let's bring some into view. That seems as good a path as any. So... — creativesoul
Sure. But in (2) how do we know that the two different opinions are about the same thing?Here's a good list of proposed agreements to form a basis for better discussion.
1 Some conflicts get resolved.
2 Sometimes the audience members are uncertain which side to believe(assuming two different opinions/narratives/explanations for the same events).
Do we agree that the two statements above report upon two remarkably different situations, consisting of remarkably different things? — creativesoul
When someone keeps contradicting themselves when asked to clarify their beliefs, how are we suppose to know whether we are disagreeing or agreeing on anything?We haven't resolved that conflict, so neither of us has demonstrated our method successfully. — unenlightened
That sounds logical. :up:I think everyone is sensitive like that, everyone is not entirely logical, but also emotional. — unenlightened
Logic. In practice not application. — I like sushi
Its application to words or statements is somewhat haphazard. There is no logical rigour to it. And any logical rigour in the abstract system is lost when it is applied to words.
If A is on B then B is under A
X is on drugs
Drugs is under X. — A Seagull
According to your statements in other threads on other topics, I don't need to show anything except express that is how I feel.More rhetorical questions. And very silly questions too. Of course in a discussion one brings in terms that were not in the op. Terms like "logic" for example. And no, an authoritarian does not cease to be an authoritarian because people ignore him. So yet again your rhetoric doesn't even disagree with what I have said. You claim logic, but you cannot construct an argument of your own or understand one when presented with it. Make an argument Harry, I dare you. Or link to an argument you have made in this thread. So us this all powerful logic you possess. — unenlightened
Now you're having the same problem I had, and many others have had with unenlightened.So you're not going to either "[ask] me for expansion, justification an so on", nor "[admit] [y]our fallibility", nor "treat others as equals by laying things out clearly, and giving explanations and references as appropriate", nor "[be] willing to reconsider in the light of the discussion".
Just going to tell me I'm wrong in a single sentence. We're three exchanges in to our disagreement and already you're either breaking your own rules or you've decided that I'm so outside of the pale that I'm not worth engaging with in the spirit of resolving conflict. — Isaac
Oh wait, you did the same thing you are accusing of unenlightened is doing.I'm not supporting Harry's position here (I disagree with it quite strongly in fact) — Isaac
It's not a fact that you brought terms like "authoritarian" and "Trump" into a discussion that wasn't about either? Did I not show how my initial post in this thread wasn't authoritarian if someone could have just ignored it? You claim to see what others will see, but I don't see it.You get to disagree. But you actually have not disagreed. If you want to disagree, say something different. A question and a random insult is not disagreeing, merely disagreeable. But anyone else can see very easily that it is substantially true because it actually quotes you traducing my argument in order to pretend that I am being political (and you of course are being logical). It's hilarious in fact. — unenlightened
Are you asking if your parents could have given you a different name, or are you asking if you had a different father but the same mother, would you still be you. You wouldn't. YOU wouldn't exist at all, as you are a product of a specific man and a specific woman, even if your mother chose the name "Bert1" for her child independent of which man she chose to mate with.So if we take the OP seriously, and think this an interesting question, and we think that I could have been other than bert1, then we must think that "I", even when spoken by bert1 does not entirely mean "bert1". That is, when bert1 is completely specified, there remains some leftovers, like cold Christmas dinner. — bert1
My qualm isn't about the scribbles we use, but what the scribbles refer to.do you have any qualms in terming Aristotle’s four modes of explanation four types of causes? Or would you rather that the term “causes” is reserved for only those causes/determinants that are temporally prior to their effects? — javra
You mean like how you cherry-picked your source on dialectic logic and how you cherry-picked this one small part of my post to respond to while ignoring the rest?Yes, I saw how you cherry-picked the definition you used also. I surveyed a number of other definitions available online that did NOT offer that simplistic equivocation. — Pantagruel
Yet your patience was renewed once unenlightened started bandwagoning.Actually, I just grew tired of what was obviously a one-sided discussion. unenlightened obviously has more patience than me. — Pantagruel
If you don't have a problem with logic being the answer to the question as posed in the OP and then clarified as referring to what is true, then you have just made it more apparent what your actual problem is.Do you seriously think I have made an argument against logic? — unenlightened
Wow! Thanks, creativesoul. So this means that you like my one-worded reply better than fdrake's post that contains so many entities and presumed truths and all that stuff you just said?When faced with competing valid explanations for what's happened and/or is happening, it is always best to err on the side of the one with the fewest unprovable premisses, the most falsifiable/verifiable claims, and the fewest entities necessary in order for it to have the explanatory power that it does - whatever that may be, and/or amount to.
The fewer the terms necessary for adequate explanation the better. The fewer falsehood, the better. Etc.
That's what's best to believe at all times regarding any and all competing explanations for the same events. — creativesoul
What I was referring to is this:I do not talk like that. Have not. Would not, unless I was intentionally and deliberately temporarily adopting another's use/sense of the term "truth". — creativesoul
So you want to know which method is useful for determining which of two opposing opinions is true. My answer was simply "Logic", which seems to be in line with the type of answer you are looking as described in your previous statement above. It is only when I pointed out your hypocrisy that the shit hit the fan in this thread.Change it to which opinions or parts thereof are true. — creativesoul
Think of logic as the rules of a computer program. The rules are applied to input to provide output. The input (premise) is supplied by the user of the program, not the program. The conclusion is the output. If you have a faulty program (faulty logic) then the output will be incorrect.You do realize that those are not mutually exclusive options, right? Logic does. I do. You do, as well. — creativesoul
Here's where empiricism and logic fails...
The conflicts that matter most are the moral/ethical ones... — creativesoul
Yet I made the same statement here and you didn't say anything of the sort.Kindly do not misrepresent my position. I consider that a reportable offence. — Pantagruel
As has been shown by me, you, fdrake and others, there are various forms of logic just as there are various forms of reason. It would be my bet that each form of logic maps onto each form of reasoning that you want to provide as an example.Logic is one constituent of reason. Reason most emphatically does NOT reduce to logic. Reason also functions through analogy, intuition, synthesis, etc. — Pantagruel
Pantagruel has been so inconsistent and intellectually dishonest since their initial interaction with me, I seriously don't know what they think or believe.No Harry. As you see, I am not mistaken. Pantagruel, @creativesoul and myself, (and @fdrake can speak for himself), but three of us are fairly clear in our continued disagreement with you. You cannot "show" that people agree with you and call that a resolution, you have to allow their autonomy and persuade them to agree. — unenlightened
Change it to which opinions or parts thereof are true. — creativesoul
Are you asking how a particular view from behind some pair of eyes came to be named "bert1"?Yes, I think it might be. But not about the causation of bert1 - that is independent of the question of why I am bert 1, that is to say, why an I looking out of bert1's eyes and not, say Banno's. One could rephrase to say "What caused me to be bert1 rather than someone else." — bert1
You're mistaken. I have shown that fdrake and Pantragruel agreed with me that logic is indeed necessary. It is only creativesoul that seems to have a problem with this. However I have shown that although creativesoul claims that they disagree, they keep attempting to use logic to make their case. So, while they disagree with their words, they agree with their actions.But what I was asking, was about the conflict between you and everyone else commenting. — unenlightened
You're confusing logic with delusions.And I can see of course that that conflict has not at all been resolved. So I wonder if it is to some extent an externalisation of that internal conflict that you claim is resolved by logic? — unenlightened
Hold on. You didn't answer the first question: What is bert1?Yes, I think it might be. But not about the causation of bert1 - that is independent of the question of why I am bert 1, that is to say, why an I looking out of bert1's eyes and not, say Banno's. One could rephrase to say "What caused me to be bert1 rather than someone else." — bert1
Luck has nothing to do with it.I used to ask what the odds are that I would find myself being a human. I had an intuition that I could have been anything. And there is so much more that is lifeless! How did I get so lucky? — petrichor
Perhaps you forgot your OP:The above are explicitly stated reasons that existed in time prior to your statement above. In your defense, I did not let you know about it at the time. Perhaps you missed that? — creativesoul
If you have a problem with logic "presupposing some truth", then why did you presuppose that there are two opposing opinions and that there is a best one to believe?Let us start by supposing that there are two opposing opinions on some matter. Is there a tried and true universally applicable method of determining for ourselves what's best to believe regarding the subject matter? — creativesoul
How did you come to know X, and in knowing X, are you not saying X is a truth, in which case you used logic to know X?One who knows nothing at all about using logic can tell whether or not all sorts of simple statements are true. So, if one such individual already knew 'X', and suddenly found themselves witnessing conflicting opinions in direct conflict to 'X', they could, quite possibly already be, one step forward in determining which of the opinions were reliable and true. — creativesoul
What you call determinancy I see as snapshot views at different sizes relative to the process we are talking about. Think about determinancy as spatial causation and efficient as temporal causation.I agree that in both examples the processes are temporal. So, if I’m interpreting you correctly, you’re saying that (efficient) causation is necessarily temporal whereas determinacy in general is not. Hence, material, formal, and teleological determinacy can each occur in simultaneity relative to that which determines and that which is thereby determined – whereas efficient determinacy, what we today most often interpret as causation, is always temporal. If so, I agree with this as well. — javra
When I write a dynamical systems program to obtain an image, I determine the image. When the program runs, it causes the image to appear. Sorry this is such a trite example. :worry: — jgill
It seems to me that the difference is simply temporal. Both events are required to occur in sequence, one before the other - writing a program and then running the program on a computer - for the image to appear on the screen. You can't run a program that hasn't been written.So when you determine the image via X, Y, and Z, how do you not cause the properties of the image via these same means? And when the running program causes the image to appear, is not the image’s appearance determined by the running program?
I’m trying to figure out what, if anything, makes the two different. — javra
Then you need to ask why events in a dynamic world can be determined statistically. The fact that statistics exists, and is useful for something, must indicate something more meaningful than statistics exist and is useful. Why does it exist and why is it useful? What does it mean to be useful? The truer the map the more useful it is.Or otherwise if you want to refer to the 'real world' you will have to rely on statistics (and perhaps the inferred probability associated with those statistics.) — A Seagull
You're establishing a pattern of arguing with your own imagination... strawmen abound. — creativesoul
You're not being very helpful. Your behavior indicates that you really aren't interested in what you put out in your OP. You seem to be showing that, at least for you, there is no method forI've offered at least three already. Address those. — creativesoul
determining for ourselves what's best to believe regarding the subject matter? — creativesoul
Yes, but what determines which one you are? — bert1
If you claim that logic can't do it alone, then you must have a reason to say such a thing - a time when logic didn't provide the best thing to believe and the best thing to believe wasn't something subjective, as logic isn't meant for determining what is subjectively best to believe - what makes you feel good as logic entails understanding that your feelings should have no bearing one determining what is true, and therefore useful.Looking.
Logic can help us determine how well grounded the opinion is by asking for the reasoning behind the opinion. So, in that way, logic can help us to determine which opinion is more reliable. Not alone though. — creativesoul
So something else other than an exchange of subjective opinions is required for determining if a state of true safety exists.Feeling safe is not being safe, by the way...
One can be told the 'right' sorts of things to believe and feel that they are safe, and yet not be. — creativesoul
Not involving the concept of thinking, but how to communicate the concept of thinking to others. In asking for definitions we are asking where each of our boundaries for such a thing as thinking are - where we might be overlapping and where we aren't, and why, and we are forced to do so via language - symbolism - because we aren't telepathic.Then the concept of "thinking" is different for us to the extent that we have different contextual-histories involving the concept of thinking. — Pantagruel
It seems to me that to say "mine" is a property of a first person perspective assumes that a first perspective is something owned by, or part of, something else. What would a first person perspective be owned by, or part of - your body? Is my brain, eyes and ears, without which wouldn't I have a first person perspective, mine?So the question is, how is the "mine" property assigned to one of the first person perspectives? — bizso09
Let us start by supposing that there are two opposing opinions on some matter. Is there a tried and true universally applicable method of determining for ourselves what's best to believe regarding the subject matter? — creativesoul
Logic. — Harry Hindu
There's always the question of which logic is appropriate for the task — fdrake
I think dialectical logic transcends the simple true-false dyad of traditional logic. — Pantagruel
"Dialectical thinking refers to the ability to view issues from multiple perspectives and to arrive at the most economical and reasonable reconciliation of seemingly contradictory information" — Pantagruel
Part of being logical is limiting the amount of assumptions to a bare minimum - like things cannot exist and not exist at the same time. There comes a point in where we need to really think about what we say because we've reached a point in the evolution of our language-use where words are being convoluted and loaded with with meanings that contradict how words are used in other instances, which just makes words useless if they can mean their opposites in the same context.The difference between them, ergo, is not logic in the sense one side has used it well and the other side has not; rather the actual source of disputes is the assumptions each side has made in their arguments and assumptions are not a matter of logic. Assumptions are made in the low visibility fog of ignorance and you may just as well flip a coin to decide which ones you want to base your views on for logic is utterly useless in this regard. — TheMadFool
You don't seem to understand what synonym means. If you look up the synonym of logical then you will get reasonable as an entry.This says that logic is reasonable, not that reason is logical. — Pantagruel
Which is to say that you didn't have all the relevant reasons to support your conclusion. What seems logical and reasonable actually wasnt - the difference between inductive and deductive logic. One is based on the laws of logic, the other on observation over time.If significant information is missing. — Pantagruel
Then it presupposes a truth - that disagreements exist.Dialectic presupposes disagreement. — Pantagruel
Then your quibble is with the scribbles, and not what the scribbles are about?This says that logic is reasonable, not that reason is logical. — Pantagruel
Which is to say that it contradicts other reasons that we have for believing that particles can exist simultaneously in two different places. Science says one thing, our senses say another. So, how do we reasonably reconcile these opposing viewpoints to the point where our opposing viewpoints aren't actually in opposition, but were seemingly in opposition prior to any reasonable reconciliation?If it is logical that if A then B, then it is reasonable to believe B given A.
On the other hand, it is reasonable to believe that particles can exist simultaneously in two different places because scientific experiments have established this as a fact. However this paradoxical result is not logical. In fact, it arguably contradicts all the rules of logic. — Pantagruel
Philosophically, logic is at least closely related to the study of correct reasoning. — Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
arrived at via correct or incorrect reasoning?Dialectical thinking refers to the ability to view issues from multiple perspectives and to arrive at the most economical and reasonable reconciliation of seemingly contradictory information" — Pantagruel
