It is my understanding that an asteroid hitting earth about 65 million years ago caused the extinction of many species of animals, including the dinosaurs. If that hadn't happened, it is likely that humans never would have evolved. If that's true, did that asteroid impact cause our existence? — T Clark
in fact in the case of metaphysics I would say there can be no certainty at all, that it all comes down to plausibility, because we are dealing with the non-cognitive.
— Janus
If metaphysics is about the non-cognitive (which needs a bit more fleshing out), are we sure that certainty and plausibility even apply? — Ludwig V
Why do we need to talk in terms of 'knowledge that' when nothing is lost by talking instead of 'justifiably believing that'?
— Janus
Well, if there were something to be gained, it might be a change worth making. But so long as we distinguish between true beliefs and false ones, the issues remain. — Ludwig V
If it is wrong to believe something that might not be the case, then, presumably, it is equally wrong not to believe something that is the case. The more cautious you are in avoiding false beliefs, the more you risk not accepting true beliefs. — Ludwig V
We can only pretend something that is possible. So if something is possibly false and we can pretend to know it, then it must be possible to actually know it. — Ludwig V
The Matrix Hypothesis I think is absurd, because it posits that there is a real world in which the virtual world we inhabit is sustained, and this means the need for explanation is just pushed one step further back.
— Janus
But Descartes' doubt isn't about explanation. He believes it's possible to doubt whether my experiences are veridical -- that is, of the things they appear to be of. He's not questioning experience in general. The Matrix hypothesis would represent such a doubt. — J
He wants the grand prize -- absolute certainty, beyond even the possibility of doubt. I personally feel that we don't need that in order to do metaphysics and epistemology; Descartes disagreed, hence his Method. But we really shouldn't see him as raising "philosophers' doubts" for the sake of skepticism. He detested skepticism and believed he had refuted it. (And we have a perfectly good modern version of the Evil Demon: the "Matrix hypothesis.") — J
The problem that I have with the idea of knowledge being defeasible is that if it isn't true it isn't knowledge, so if what I think I know is possibly false, then I don't really know it—so I say instead that I believe it and that it is belief, not knowledge, which is defeasible.
— Janus
I think one defeats a claim to knowledge if it is false. Possibly false is far too strong and leads to us abandoning swathes of what we know quite unnecessarily. "possible" does not imply "actual". — Ludwig V
OK, that seems like a good way to look at it, with perhaps the caveat that it's reasonable also to ask, "Why are you certain?" or "What makes you rely on this experience?" (similarity to previous ones, presumably). — J
Agreed. I think we're speaking of self-justification here. Can you justify to yourself that "I am thinking X" is necessarily true? — J
Ah, the sound of intellectual impotence. It's uninteresting. It's unimportant. It's irrelevant. Why in the name of John Locke should I be concerned about what you find to be uninteresting? — frank
Still, it could be a collective dream. It really could be. We don't know. :grin: — frank
Kant’s point is that principles like “every change in velocity has a cause” are synthetic a priori: they enable prediction, but also hold necessarily for all possible experience. That’s what allows physics to be both law-governed and universally valid. — Wayfarer
Therefore the guide must include evidence from the empirical sciences, but not be restricted to those principles, thereby employing a method which extends beyond them. — Metaphysician Undercover
That argument was, you have wildly divergent views of what quantum physics means (realist, idealist, anti-realist etc), so how can you appeal to physics for a metaphysical thesis, when these foundational issues are still a matter of controversy. — Wayfarer
They're known as 'citations'. — Wayfarer
But if you allow that "universe" extends to all those aspects of reality which are hidden from the empirical sciences (a very large part of reality as Wayfarer has proven), then your claim that "we have no more reliable, or even any other reliable, guide, to 'how the universe truly is" than science', must be blatantly false. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore the guide must include evidence from the empirical sciences, but not be restricted to those principles, thereby employing a method which extends beyond them. — Metaphysician Undercover
A priori means “prior to experience.” If you tell me you have seven beers in the fridge and I bring to another five to give you, I can know you have twelve beers without opening the fridge door. That’s a trivial example, but it illustrates the point: the truth of 7+5=12 doesn’t depend on checking the fridge. — Wayfarer
Or we might conclude that "directly observing" and "having" are two ways of saying the same thing, so no actual reason has been offered. Then, if "I am having thought X" needs a justification, we'd have to look elsewhere. — J
He asserts instead that it is a matter of our enmeshment in a “form of life”, a hinge on the basis of which to organize facts rather than the ascertainment of those empirical facts by themselves. — Joshs
Kant in no way denied the fundamental role of language, I don’t think that would have ever occurred to him.
The ‘empirical doctrine of mathematics’ is associated with John Stuart Mill, although as I understand it, very much a minority view. — Wayfarer
That shows arithmetic is not just “distilled” from perception, but depends on something prior in our cognitive framework — the capacity to represent number as such, and to apply operations universally and necessarily. — Wayfarer
But in Kant's terms, the idea of the 'synthetic a priori' is basic to the entire project of the Critique, and without it the possibility of mathematics and natural science as objective knowledge would be left unexplained. — Wayfarer
Such as the claim that 'It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how Nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about Nature'. How would you respond to that? — Wayfarer
I'm not attacking a strawman - you’re treating “the facts of science” as if they were metaphysically transparent, a window to 'how the universe truly is', when they are plainly not. — Wayfarer
Who are you showing this to? Yourself? Me? If it's me, then it's only worth my time if you are trying to convince me, rather than just "witnessing" it to me (like the Jehovah's witness tells me, when I answer the door). Otherwise we're just stating our positions and reacting to what the other person says- a waste of our time. — Relativist
That last category was Kant’s unique insight. Mathematics is built around it — “7+5=12” is not analytic, because “12” isn’t contained in “7+5,” but it’s still a priori. — Wayfarer
Nowadays, there is debate over whether there really are laws of nature — Wayfarer
I'm good with all that. Just wanted to make the case that almost anything we claim to be true requires some (potential) justification. — J
the truth of things which are true by definition and logical self-evidence is simply obvious, and just needs to be pointed out to be established in conscious understanding.
— Janus
It is obvious to us. But we have learnt how to do reasoning as part of learning language and interacting with people. — Ludwig V
So, if we know p could be false, then we don't know that it's true, but we may well believe that it's true.
— Janus
Then on the premise that we know that every p (epistemological truth) could be false, we cannot know any p. — Leontiskos
The ideal situation is where both sides of the bargain feel the deal being struck is fair. A win-win. I get to do anything I can imagine wanting to do ... to the degree that I can also rely on everyone else being there to bail me out when I stuff up. And everyone else says I'm free to stuff up as much as I like, but there is a limit to the bail-out that the community is willing to provide. In the long run, my free action has to be judged as being a positive contribution to the community. — apokrisis
psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (trying to pronounce that name might produce a flow state.)) — Wayfarer
But all three of these things -- truth by definition, logical self-evidence, and the reliability of direct observation -- are ways of demonstrating justification. To understand this, imagine explaining any one of them to an intelligent child. They all involve steps, cogitation, judgment, insight. We don't simply see why they are true, or at least not usually. In fact, as you know, the reliability of direct observation can be challenged, and the challenge is precisely for a justification as to how such observations lead to truth. — J
But liberalism says questions of the human good are, for the most part, private matters. Public ethics must be built around liberal dogmas re pluralism and the unknowability of the human good. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You seem to be doing that black and white thinking. I haven't said that exclusive or even primary focus on accumulating wealth would be a good thing. It wouldn't because it leads to egregious exploitation of other humans, animals and environments.
— Janus
That post was written in response to your comment about practical philosophies that were "all about" the acquisition of wealth, hence my response. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Self-help teachings and practices, if they are effective, should help people to live better lives. Of course I realize some of them are all about how to achieve financial success, but is that really such a bad aim for someone if it doesn't degenerate into acquisitive greed, especially if they aspire to be a householder and parent? — Janus
More desirable for whom? Certainly not for people who want to radically reshape the society, or for those who profit from or enjoy conflict. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Man as the political animal cuts both ways. Man might be naturally social and compassionate, but man also has a strong tendency towards overwrought thymotic passions. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Natural selection needs random variety so it can continue to optimise a living and mindful structure of habit.
— apokrisis
"Optimize" how? This is a value-laden term, just like your earlier invocation of "Darwinian success." Now if there is no end being sought, and whatever is "adaptive" is just whatever just so happens to end up happening, all these value terms are simply equivocations. Indeed, "pragmatism" is itself an equivocation if there is no real end involved. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I meant to say it isn’t the conceptions themselves that earn the title, but the relation of them to each other. For those conceptions that don’t relate the title is lost, that’s all. — Mww
Why two straight lines cannot enclose a space, is no longer a mystery. Even if it isn’t the case, it is still a perfectly logical explanation. — Mww
Wouldn’t we have to be able to separate J, T or B from the others to think we know something when in fact what we know is missing J, T or B? Or are all three destroyed, along with K, when we are in error? — Fire Ologist
We know analytic statements are true.
— Janus
But do we know this apart from the right justifications? I don't see how. Even something as clear as modus ponens can and must be explained and justified; we don't say "I just know it." — J
No. I know the cat is on the chair but it could have been on the mat. Hence "the cat is on the chair" is true but could have been false. — Banno
It just makes sense that two straight lines cannot enclose a space but no one ever thought about the rational mechanism by which two unrelated, non-empirical conceptions can be conjoined to construct its own evidence, since Nature is never going to provide the universality and absolute necessity required for its proof. — Mww
Usually a judgement is termed tautological insofar as it is true by definition irrespective of its conceptual content, whereas analytical merely indicates that the subject/predicate conceptions as the content in self-evident judgements belong to each other, or that one contains the other within it. — Mww
Neither do I; in themselves they don’t. They are the conditions necessary in the form of a judgement, for the certainty in the relations of the conceptions which are its content. They don’t yield, or produce, certainty, so much as make it possible. — Mww
Sorry for the delay. I got doin’ Her Satanic Majesty’s Request, if ya know what I mean. Flower beds, of all things. The kinda thing the average joe’s hardly likely to get right. — Mww
If we think we know something and it turns out to be false, then we didn't know it. — Banno
If you indeed know that p, then p is true. — Banno
If we know something is true we must know it is not false. That's not the same as that it cannot* be false. It's not knowledge that is defeasible, but belief. Everything we know is true - just like every fact is true. Some things we think we know, are false - and therefore we do not know them.
If we think we know it's true, but it turns out it is false, then we didn't know it was true in the first place.
See how it works?
*Are we going to look at modality again? Let's not. — Banno
↪Janus You prefer utility to truth? — Banno
The truth doesn't care about what is useful. — Banno
which Banno has also picked up on, namely whether the T in JTB is doing any useful work.
— J
Of course it is doing useful work. — Banno
When do I ever know something is true apart from having the right justifications? How can we make truth independent of justification -- make J and T genuinely separate criteria? — J
The world "spiritual" is not in the original quote. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Or, because this is unconvincing, you get anti-realism and an ethics of sentiment that collapses any distinction between what is currently desired and what is truly desirable.
This is precisely what absolutizes individual preference and privatizes any deeper notions of teleology. — Count Timothy von Icarus
A focus on wealth (or career success as a proxy for status) as a primary aim seems to be a paradigmatic example of "putting second things first," no? Sure, wealth is useful. There are plenty of miserable wealthy people though. Wealth is only useful in parting with it; it's a proximate aim at best. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Exactly the sort of thing I had in mind. The "privatization" part of secularization makes it essentially impossible to have any public teaching of ethics per se. Of course, ethics is still taught, just not directly and reflectively. — Count Timothy von Icarus