blundering through. — Tom Storm
rigor — Tom Storm
Can an amateur learn how to enjoy "academical" philosophical discussions — Ansiktsburk
Not trying to be a dick but how about this? My daughter has a one year old son. She has embraced an Evangelical form of Christianity and believes vaccination is a conspiracy and prayer will suffice to keep her and her boy safe. I believe in vaccination. Do I care and accept this situation as 'her version of truth/facts'? Do I care if it's the right decision? What would you do? — Tom Storm
My daughter has a one year old son. She has embraced an Evangelical form of Christianity and believes vaccination is a conspiracy and prayer will suffice to keep her and her boy safe. I believe in vaccination. Do I care and accept this situation as 'her version of truth/facts'? Do I care if it's the right decision? What would you do? — Tom Storm
Not to me. Maybe to some people. The challenge to educate them that such is against both reason and their own self-interest. — tim wood
what do you hold to be the source of the greater dangers in the world, both to individuals and to society at every scale? — tim wood
Stupidity: an affliction of all at one time or another, for most to a lesser degree, but for some a career. — tim wood
fact, belief, knowledge, and truth are all pretty much the same thing.
— T Clark
Hanged for one hanged for any, no difference to you? — tim wood
I am unconcerned with whether a state of affairs obtains or if I am wrong if my epistemology cannot account for such. I am much closer to using ideas as tools to help obtain my ends and those of people/things within my scope of moral regard (to whatever level they fall within it). Either acting as if is efficacious or it is not. The world imposes itself on me and I try to mold it to my desires using whatever contrivance available. All “facts” are understood contingently and abandoned/modified as necessary. Facts are understood in a political context (all speech is political speech) and assertions of fact which you insist other people acknowledge as being such is a ploy. — Ennui Elucidator
I don’t understand what I have written well enough for me to know if I agree or disagree. I was hoping “Banno” would tell me. — Ennui Elucidator
Hmm. I'll invite T Clark and @Olivier5 to respond to Ennui, given what they have claimed here. — Banno
It is far preferable to be beaten up by you. — Ennui Elucidator
Yes, but voting with our feelings instead of a deliberate attempt to understand the choices, does not lead to a healthy Republic and it puts our liberty in jeopardy. — Athena
You do not think gravity is what holds things to the earth? You don't think we have day and night because the earth turns? You don't think plants and animals die when they do not get water? You think all the forces of nature could suddenly be completely different for no reason at all? — Athena
Do you think knowledge of logos, reason, the controlling force of the universe, i — Athena
If we do not realize the difference between emotional thinking verse logic and reasoning nor the difference between non-fiction and fiction, — Athena
And there was me thinking it referred to the Cool-Aid Acid Test. — unenlightened
I'm not quite drunk on the Kool-aid, — Zugzwang
The best one is theoretical high energy physics. That story is heavy and very enjoyable science fiction/fantasy. The really strange thing is that it's rooted in reality. — Inplainsight
Thank you a sane post. — Athena
The fact that science is one story amongst many. — Inplainsight
Well, maybe we would be done with Covid if Trump had not dismantled the department that was about preventing or at least controlling pandemics, and maybe the economic pain would have been much less if the pandemic had been handled properly from the beginning instead of having a President who denied science and lied to everyone, and is still the king of ignorance flooding our hospitals and requiring refrigerator trucks long after everyone should have been vaccinated. — Athena
Nothing is more important to this thread than understanding the importance of science, and citizens who understand what science has to do with our survival and democracy. — Athena
You must be a citizen of the US or maybe a member of the Taliban in Afghanistan? What is your understanding of democracy if it is not understanding what reasoning has to do with democracy? Do you understand what freedom of speech has to do with democracy? Science gives us information that is essential to good moral judgment. The whole climate change discussion is about what has caused climate change and if we can and should do something to correct a manmade problem. There are political and economic and life and death ramifications, to understanding science and what behaviors will increase or decrease our shared problems. — Athena
For me (and perhaps this is where T Clark and I may differ) qualitative ideas in experience interact to form concepts but have no form themselves. — Possibility
As for what we can describe without language, isn’t this what art is for? — Possibility
But can't concepts be derived from experiences? — Noble Dust
Indeed, you did. — Banno
So truth matters. — Banno
I like the focus on decision making. — Zugzwang
'a fact is the kind of statement that all us reasonable people consider true, for now.' — Zugzwang
if you begin by agreeing with Trump, you've lost. — Banno
Good question. If you've been cavalier and indiscriminate in understanding and use of "fact/belief/knowledge/truth" then how are you gong to decide? — tim wood
But if the counter to lies is just alternate belief, what's the point?
Isn't the point that the election was fair, vaccines do save lives, climate change is man-made?
If you start from the premise that truth doesn't matter, you've already lost. — Banno
You're right, TC, but what hope for us all if politics, on whatever side, becomes immune to facts and will only accept and disseminate beliefs of increasing bizarreness? There's work to be done. — Tom Storm
Nicely done, TC. It does however make me feel quite justified in walking away from any kind of fathomless, inscrutable writings. What possible use can they have (for me)?
Have to say (and this is not a criticism) I find it interesting that you can reconcile this with your model of pragmatism. — Tom Storm
The OP is ambiguous to the extent one wonders if it's asking (1) whether English in particular offers limitations in what it can describe as opposed to what might be only explainable in French, for example or (2) whether certain concepts are ineffable and not reducible to langauge. — Hanover
As to (1), I think the consensus is no, that all langauges in principle can equally explain things, even if it requires more words or longer explanations. — Hanover
What you've addressed iare the sociological biases inherent in language, which I'd agree with. If our houses are built for our particular needs, I can imagine langauge would be similar. I don't think that what I've said regarding #1 impacts #2, but i can see debate there. — Hanover
(2) whether certain concepts are ineffable and not reducible to langauge. — Hanover
As to (2), I've argued they are, and that's what I addressed. — Hanover
Well, I am. It might help ↪tim wood if he is able to say that Kelly-Anne Conway is wrong. That's harder to do if you are going to maintain that its belief that counts, not truth. — Banno
That's exactly the distinction marked by distinguishing belief from fact. — Banno
To me this sounds very clunky. Do you think all of reality is clunky? — Yohan
I think pain pills and hypothermia might be interesting, a whole psychedelic death journey, with my last moments being perhaps the most exciting. If I did have to hang, I think I'd want to the broken neck. I'd prefer the guillotine though, if I had to offer my neck. — Zugzwang
An earth worms world is dirt. A bird's world is the sky. Dirt and sky are not the same thing thought about differently. — Yohan
In my world there are many worlds. In your world there is one.
Who is right. — Yohan
Yeah that is what I'm saying, but only in the damnably long term. — Srap Tasmaner
No, our knowledge of facts is tentative. The true is always satisfiable. Else true doesn't mean true. This, or there is no difference between fact and true. — tim wood
Once you've institutionalized such practices, you can even overcome failures like the replication crisis. The faith is that democracy can support similar incremental progress towards a just society, despite its failures. — Srap Tasmaner
