Kant and Hume emphasized the importance of scientific knowledge in many of their writings, specially the extraordinary achievements of Isaac Newton. And the same can be said about Bertrand Russell and the Science of his time. He even wrote an introductory book on the Theory of Relativity. Yet they didn't ignore the problem of induction, why? — Amalac
Because they thought the foundations of Science important. Kant even believed that he found a satisfactory solution to the problem (whether he actually solved the problem of induction or not is a controversial and difficult question). Because to ignore problems that are inconvenient or annoying for one's beliefs was for them an act of intellectual treachery. And I try to follow them in this respect. — Amalac
What do you mean by “beyond the bounds of reason”? Asking for the justification of the principle of induction seems within the bounds of reason. Hume, Russell, Kant and many others seemed to think so, and I do too. — Amalac
But the problem of induction also raises the following question: How do we know that the laws of physics, chemistry and biology won't change or cease to function in the future? Once again, we face the problem of how to justify that that is probably the case without begging the question. — Amalac
For example: even if we admit that we know that the claims that the sun will not rise tomorrow had always been false in the past, that gives no reason to expect that it will rise in the future, nor even that it is more likely that it will rise. — Amalac
If that happened, it would perhaps prove that E=MC^2 when that happened, but it wouldn't prove that E≠MC^2 must be false in the future (not even in the next second after which that happened). — Amalac
Münchhausen Trilemma — Amalac
Piece of cake...
Do you really believe that in 50, 100, 1000 years from now that our conception of any of the sciences will still be the same? If you have studied science in the least, you would have to know that scientific knowledge is exploding, a process that will leave all current concepts completely vacuous much sooner than we believe possible. — synthesis
The notion that human beings have no access to reality (primarily owing to the fact that all things intellectual are in constant flux) might just suggest that what you believe is real can easily be deconstructed (as can all things knowable) and vanish into thin air. — synthesis
If you reject absolutes, this might suggest that you (and everybody else) find sustenance in the relative. — synthesis
You know what I think? You don't even know what you think! — synthesis
The poison is moral relativism, not intellectual relativism, in general. — synthesis
All knowledge constantly changes due to the constantly changing factors which give rise to it. Since even the simplest of things is given birth by an infinite number of factors/events preceding, you are telling me that you understand not only simple things but highly complex ones, as well? This is the arrogance of man. — synthesis
My question for Nietzsche would be: Why should we embrace his view? — Fides Quaerens Intellectum
THAT attitude. — synthesis
What did they teach me at school? Are you really asking me what they taught me at school? You've got to be kidding. — synthesis
cp, you seem like a pretty bright guy (as do most here), but you have no clue what's beyond your attempts to intellectualize whatever truths you seems to hold. Do you really believe that what you put forth is in any sense real? — synthesis
That must be it. — synthesis
He is suggesting that the attraction to truth is natural but this need for power and all the negativity that has become associated with it has made it appear unnatural. But with a little effort it can be remembered because it is the natural state of the soul to experience truth. This remembering is the source of the human aim to experience the truth of the human condition evenat the risk of avoiding the pleasures that mask this need. — Nikolas
cp, what's with the attitude? — synthesis
This is just a friendly conversation. — synthesis
Freedom is all kinds of things to all kinds of people. Personally, it is something within, but that wasn't the point of this thread. The freedom I was referencing was generic. And suggesting that freedom doesn't really exist seems quite subjective to my eye. Of course absolute freedom does not exist but then again, absolute anything does not exist either, unless you wish to consider, The Absolute, where everything "exists" in the void. — synthesis
But, if I recall, you're not into that sort of thing. If it were your thing (and if you understand how thinking works), you could trash every thought ever made on this site. It's not very difficult. Cognition and language is a system that obeys rules like any other system, so once you figure it out... — synthesis
I agree with you as far as the attraction to power and the prestige and its effect on human higher values. But IYO what is the source of higher values like justice? Does Man create them by trial and error or are they remembered as Plato suggests? Remembrance is called anamnesis and the purpose of philosophy is to help Man remember through the ability to experience objective conscience. So does man create objective values or are they remembered as universal perennial knowledge? — Nikolas
cp, what's the point of responding if you don't think it's a valid question? My response to you was basically suggesting that when it comes down to it, is anything valid? It is easy to disprove anything when dealing with an intellectual framework where all things are relative and constantly changing. — synthesis
Science can establish the objective truth of facts in the world. However it can't reveal the objective truth of values. The human condition prevents it. — Nikolas
Since it cannot, society values pleasure over the pursuit of truth. — Nikolas
That is the problem: can facts and values become reconciled as a quality of truth normal for balanced Man? It can IMO — Nikolas
but it requires a quality of consciousness rejected by the world as a whole which glorifies its imbalance described by Plato as cave life. — Nikolas
I believe that our intellect has no real access to the truth of anything, — synthesis
Not only is freedom an ideal, but so is everything else. — synthesis
The notion that the universe is determined fails. — Banno
I see. So your faith is not an expression of wanting God to exist? — counterpunch
I wouldn’t say so in the slightest. Of course, I am glad God exists, but that came after my realisation. Perhaps none of us are free from the confirmation bias, but I believe I came to my belief logically — Georgios Bakalis
No. Not at all. My question is simply inquiring into some of the motives for atheism. — Georgios Bakalis
Hi, I am a theist and I have a question for atheists. I hope this does not cause too much turmoil. Do atheists actively not want God to exist? I am aware that many atheists come to their conclusion because they believe God is impossible and other reasons. However, is there ever an element of not wanting God to exists? I hope this makes sense. — Georgios Bakalis
The announcement today from CERN about the discovery of a new, previously undetected, force in nature, exerting a mysterious influence of unknown origin - could be the... — Gary Enfield
I do not believe there is a single good argument for the proposition that our minds are our brains. — Bartricks
I do not believe there is a single good argument for the proposition that our minds are our brains. By all means prove me wrong... — Bartricks
What I want to say, despite it could sound quite totalitarian, is that some parents do not deserve have kids because these will have a bad life. — javi2541997