And also for those of us who have been here for years, every thread, especially started by someone new, ought to be approached as if you yourself were talking about it for the first time and explain your reasoning clearly. — ssu
This is a slippery slope as we then make further conclusions and respond in ways that confuse or annoy the other people (who also do the same thing back to us). A particularly problematic part of this is when we attribute causes and characteristics, assuming they are saying or doing things for intrinsically personal reasons, but which are in fact false.
Miller's Law is effectively used by those who want to avoid the truth as they deliberately answer a question truthfully but in a way that deceives.
Did you punch him?
No I did not punch him. (actually they karate-chopped him).
The point to remember here is to be careful in your questioning and ensure you get the full picture. A clue in the statement above is that a truthful person is more likely to say just 'No', whilst the deceiver carefully parrots back the 'punch' phrase to ensure the truth of their statement is clear. — Don Wade
I would suggest that we already follow the idea of miller's Law, or at least, the majority of us do. We, generally, do not read an op and instantly assume it is a lie, or seek only to disprove it as false, although I do recognize that frequently we do point out flaws, or disagree with a posted opinion, not out of an assumption that the other is based on an untruth, but that we may have found a flaw in the logic. This, to me, is healthy and appropriate debate and discussion of a topic. Most of us do this. A few respond with insults rather than healthy debate, but that is true for all discussions, sometimes you just have to write off a response. — Book273
The closest I could come was "Conniver." — James Riley
Usually, they pretend to be leaders, but turn out to be followers. the trick is to push to the front of wherever people are already going. Populism is the name of the game. — unenlightened
In other words, if you think a topic is stupid or beneath you, then don't even engage in it, not even to tell someone you think as much. If you truly have a disagreement, comment, question, or just want to engage in productive dialogue, that is when you participate. — schopenhauer1
Perhaps it would be useful in allowing us to understand something about the person telling us something (e.g., he's an idiot, under the influence) but not the statement being made. — Ciceronianus the White
This way any statement is necessary for acceptance for truthfulness, since human imagination is endless. — god must be atheist
I'm all for Miller's law, but then if the site accepts it this law to be enforceable, I'll refer posters to this law, those posters who are pissed off with me for sticking to my guns on wording, and the law shalt prevail. — god must be atheist
I've never heard of a model that posits contraction that doesn't accelerate to some kind of crunch singularity. Doesn't mean such a model doesn't exist, but I've never heard of it. — noAxioms
Unsatisfied in the case of uniform distribution everywhere. The level of compression has nothing to do with it. The current density of the universe (about 6 protons per cubic meter) is enough to prevent expansion if it was that mass expanding into empty space. None of the material would have sufficient recession speed to exceed the escape velocity of the bounded mass that comprised the occupied part of the universe. — noAxioms
Science is confident about the minimum size of the universe today in absolute terms. It is also confident about what the speed of light can achieve in normal circumstances today. Clearly the maths which T Clark pointed out is self explanatory if you believe in the Big Bang. The universe must, in absolute terms, have expanded faster than the recognised maximum speed of light. — Gary Enfield
It is thence a rather misleading characterization to say that the universe "started" with the Big Bang, as it always existed beforehand, just in a state so unlike anything we can conceive that one cannot speak of it meaningfully. — Vessuvius
The universe isn't an object in space like a star. — noAxioms
I can picture four grains without a problem. I merely point out the psychological machinery involved. It helps to have the simplest and most regular global arrangement in mind, even if that geometry of relations is then also suppressed to a large degreed to emphasise the distinctness of each grain. — apokrisis
What? Visualising four grains seems easy. Especially if they are arranged as four corners of a square. — apokrisis
But that is where a logic of vagueness comes in. It can add a third metaphysical-strength ingredient to the story. It says that both poles of any such categorical dichotomy must arise - by reciprocal constraint - out of the common resource which is a vagueness. — apokrisis
I think the shock wave you are talking about is space. — T Clark
I agree that vagueness (and/or ambiguity) is integral to our thinking. Look up a word in the dictionary and you get other words, which you can then look up, and get still other words. Without a rough sense of what basic words mean (including words like 'mean') you can't get anywhere. And this point ignores the intrinsic limitations of dictionaries. A market is perhaps a good metaphor for language. The sounds and scribbles have various somewhat predictable effects when used skillfully, without, however, even becoming perfectly clear. — T H E
The delightful thing about the sorites is that it can spring up again from the rubble... — bongo fury
I looked at the post you referred to and it seems that the philosophy of levels is about viewing from a closer level in contrast to seeing from the larger perspective. I came across an associate idea when I was studying English literature at school, which was the idea of the microcosm and macrocosm as perspectives. This distinction has a history going back to Aristotle, but you are quite possibly familiar with it, and perhaps it is part of your own philosophy. — Jack Cummins
But then in fact, this categorical division allows us to construct spectrums of possibility. We can see the range of different balances of lumped~split, grouped~scattered, general~individual that lie between the polar extremes. — apokrisis
Yes, I think that the very first post I ever communicated with you on was you speaking about the idea of levels, when I began referring to the dance track, by Avicii, 'Levels.' — Jack Cummins
But what kind of larger interest are you thinking about that does not rely on the vagueness of a "for all practical purposes" more or less answer? — apokrisis
but I do think a systems approach does provide some basis for sketching some foundations amidst our uncertainty. — Jack Cummins
Discoursive practices' seem to consist in something like — 180 Proof
This developmental view is thus semiotic, or brings the further question of meaning and purpose into play within logic or ontology. Vagueness becomes negated to the degree there is some larger interest in play. — apokrisis
I am not sure that it is helpful to go as far as saying that, but it does seem that we need to live with some flexibility because reality is unpredictable. — Jack Cummins
I recommend a book which I read a few years ago on the usefulness of fuzziness in thinking, by Bart Kosko (1993), 'Fuzzy Logic.' — Jack Cummins
Or do you mean, has anyone thought of basing their philosophy on vagueness? Yes, all the time, because it's a feature of language. — bongo fury
If you're asking is there is some direct method, I think there is not, and there are results in some areas of study that suggest that generally there cannot be. What do you think? — tim wood
Nevertheless, vagueness, itself, it is already absorbed previously by nihilism because this is the main premise or thought about uncertainty. — javi2541997
I guess vagueness can be absorbed by two big branches of philosophy — javi2541997
If philosophy product, then one hopes vagueness squeezed out. — tim wood