On the finite number line, — jgill
What, for you, is indubitable? — A Seagull
Notice the "for you"?
That's there because one chooses what to believe, and hence what to doubt.
Here again is the oft ignored distinction between what is true and what is believed. — Banno
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
I don't know what you mean by "mending" in this statement. — Harry Hindu
↪A Seagull Why would that be? You have a model of the moon, and then there is the actual moon itself. — Syamsu
↪A Seagull Uh, you know the distinction between a model of something, and what it is a model of. — Syamsu
What is the difference between a 'fact' and 'what a fact is about'? And how can the two be compared?↪A Seagull To verify a fact, means to verify that the fact corresponds 1 to 1 with what the fact is about. — Syamsu
The law is a 'fact', the opinion of an 'expert' is an 'opinion'. — A Seagull
I'd say the law is subject to interpretation. Wo while the text of the law is a fact, the rules that the text establishes aren't — Echarmion
If A is on B then B is under A
X is on drugs
Drugs is under X. — A Seagull
You're confusing the symbol with its meaning. The "on" in the second statement doesn't mean the same as the "on" in your first, therefore the conclusion doesn't follow. It's not really about the symbols, but what the symbols mean. — Harry Hindu
Is the law credible, or is it just the law? Otherwise I see a lot of criminals deserving freedom - perhaps even compensation. — remoku
Photons and other fundamental particles including the electron and proton, exhibit behaviour that sometimes can best be described by waves eg diffraction, and sometimes as particles. eg the photoelectric effect. These characteristics are both seen in the famous 2-slit experiment, the results of which still confound scientists and philosophers. Perhaps the best overall model is that of a quantum wave.26
What I’ve always found interesting is when my high school textbooks always described light energy as having both particle and wave characteristics without ever explaining the reason for that. — Braindead
A person is trapped in a facility desperate to escape. — Benj96
How much of what has been written about philosophy is indubitable? — A Seagull
What would be the point of writing down what is indubitable, except as a jumping off point (like Descartes' cogito)? — SophistiCat
↪A Seagull I mean logic by logic? Abstracted and applied.
All men are mortal.
I am a man.
I will die.
There are various logical schemes, but propositional logic doesn’t require application to the real world - meaning the nuances of semantics. In the purest state it is mathematical, whilst applied to statements the meaning of terms used has to be agreed upon. — I like sushi
A Seagull Logic. In practice not application. — I like sushi
↪A Seagull
What makes philosophers interesting is that they are writing for themselves.
Once you start writing for other people, you become boring.
As it has been and will forever be. — Valentinus
↪A Seagull
I found that quite thought provoking. Why is loathing not productive, except at least a starting point? — JoeyB
Personally, I am doubtful of almost all of it. — A Seagull
I'm wondering if you had something specific in mind when you said "almost all of it". Or, perhaps you were meaning this in a more general way. — Statilius
How much of what has been written about philosophy is indubitable?
What, for you, is indubitable? — A SeagullWell first, what do you mean by "undubitable"? — 180 Proof
Why does it exist and why is it useful? — Harry Hindu
Anyone think I’m wrong about modern society (or agree)? — madworld
So I think I would like to start a discussion on just this topic. I think it could be fruitful. Would you be OK with that? --Best, Statilius — Statilius
Though many of these works may deal directly with believing lies, it strikes me that the cause(s) of human suffering may not be fully and adequately incorporated in the narrow concept of 'believing lies.' — Statilius
philosophy is useless if it does not remove suffering from the soul. — Statilius
I’d like to discover what differences people would find between “that which determines X” and “that which causes X”. — javra
Is perception itself an error or assumption? — Benj96
So in what sense does it mean to say that 1,2,3... goes on ad infinitum? — Marchesk
↪A Seagull
Counting is a temporal process. Two comes after one. Three comes after two. You cannot remove the temporal aspect of counting, to claim that time is irrelevant to counting. It is essential. Try counting when four comes before three. It doesn't work. — Metaphysician Undercover
It requires an infinity of time to count an infinity of numbers, so "counting infinity" does have something to do with time. — Metaphysician Undercover
The soul more or less means the totality of all emotions throughout life, as a whole. — Syamsu
Let me throw in another question: how does philosophy differ from "thinking" generally? Or does it? — Xtrix
So, it's like a delusion, plain and simple? — Shawn
What do you understand solipsism to mean? — QuixoticAgnostic
https://www.google.com/search — Shawn
How does one stop being a solipsist once one? — Shawn