Simon Anders
Valued Senior Member
I found this intriguing. I feel like I am missing something.Since I am an atheist/agnostic I am trying to avoid the appearance of empiricism.
I found this intriguing. I feel like I am missing something.Since I am an atheist/agnostic I am trying to avoid the appearance of empiricism.
I found this intriguing. I feel like I am missing something.
Oops. My 'no' was a typo, and a perverse one from my unconscious. Yes, I agree.
Well, that's overly optimistic, but at least it allows us to believe in things. When I think of the fallout - and intentionally chosen metaphor - philosohically from the metaphysical and ontological conclusions of experts - be they religious or scientific - beyond the repeatable sense data aspects of their 'work', I would say the problems persist. But somehow I would guess you agree and did not mean at all to deny such issues.
I would also say that much of our experience of 'direct contact' with 'thing' that we can claim to 'know' because we were in 'direct contact' with 'them' are actually experiences constructed by expectation. Our own, those of experts, etc. And that this is not restricted to religious people. In fact I am not sure we can function without, essentially, agreeing to be vulnerable to this.
And given that the belief is often described as the latter, knowledge, requires proof for others is available, collective expectations, which can be constructed, can seem to confirm 'knowledge' when all it confirms is collective training. And again I am aimed this not just at the religious.
I am hoping he doesn't, because I do feel there is a certain distaste for sense data amongst empiricists and would not mind exploring that.Indeed.
Methinks he should mean quite the opposite....
I think the issue comes up around implications and what it means if a certain experiment can be interpreted well by thinking in terms of certain kinds of entities or building blocks or processes. From the relative safety of restrained context related language, a game of telephone occurs, even in the brains of the researcher herself, and suddenly a widely applied AND DOMINANT ontology is posited that precludes others. This is real, these are the blocks, therefore that cannot be a block.Surely, problems do persist. This is why I made a point to say that it's a pragmatic issue. Ultimately, this method pays dividends, much more so than any alternative.
Your guess is correct. I wouldn't make a claim that any epistemological system can even possibly approach being exhaustive, and so, gaps will always remain. I suspect however, that this incompleteness has more to do with us observers, as opposed to the object(s) of our observations.
I am horrified at how much time I have spent reinventing wheels in a number of discplines, including those little practices that go into being a functional adult.I am in complete agreement.
Again, certain to never be complete, but quite capable of rectifying the vast majority of cases.
If every single person had to learn everything from 'scratch' so to speak, we would, quite literally, never get anything done....
No, I wouldn't say I want to go beyond. It that I want more sophistication about how constructed that might be. I think I also want people to face their own demons. IOW if they are going to be rigorous about the conclusions of others the do not share, they should be similarly rigorous about their own. Because, for example, many people may be fairly well read in science, but not in anthropology or psychology, they may not really understand what it is to have a fundamental entity challenged. This leads to a false sense of superiority - one I have never felt from you - - deftness as a writer or pleasant personality and humility as potential sources all being beyong my 'knowing' at this point -- poor approaches to interpersonal conflicts around contested entities and perhaps even direct understanding of how entities may indeed be founded in ways now deemed unacceptable.I agree.
But there's nothing wrong with this. Why do we need to have an (to me..) unfair expectation of "Knowledge" to be something somehow beyond what you describe here? I feel no need.
yes. I am not contesting the value of the conclusions themselves in their restricted areas.Do note that the one key element we have here is a self-checking phase built right into our system: all it takes is for one contrary case to nullify a standing agreement. It's not as if we all move along blindly accepting our historical tenets, and move from there to build others.
How so?Mind, I must note this proviso: my theory of knowledge is somewhat off the beaten track compared to most of what you'll see on here....
I am hoping he doesn't, because I do feel there is a certain distaste for sense data amongst empiricists and would not mind exploring that.
I think the issue comes up around implications and what it means if a certain experiment can be interpreted well by thinking in terms of certain kinds of entities or building blocks or processes. From the relative safety of restrained context related language, a game of telephone occurs, even in the brains of the researcher herself, and suddenly a widely applied AND DOMINANT ontology is posited that precludes others. This is real, these are the blocks, therefore that cannot be a block.
I am horrified at how much time I have spent reinventing wheels in a number of discplines, including those little practices that go into being a functional adult.
No, I wouldn't say I want to go beyond. It that I want more sophistication about how constructed that might be. I think I also want people to face their own demons. IOW if they are going to be rigorous about the conclusions of others the do not share, they should be similarly rigorous about their own. Because, for example, many people may be fairly well read in science, but not in anthropology or psychology, they may not really understand what it is to have a fundamental entity challenged. This leads to a false sense of superiority - one I have never felt from you - - deftness as a writer or pleasant personality and humility as potential sources all being beyong my 'knowing' at this point -- poor approaches to interpersonal conflicts around contested entities and perhaps even direct understanding of how entities may indeed be founded in ways now deemed unacceptable.
How so?
It is just another silly contrivance on the part of theists to prop up their cults. Their gods doesn't exist in, out, above, below or anywhere else other than their imaginations.
So, we could probably safely conclude it is their imaginations that are, "Out of this Universe!"
Simon and Glaucon,
Sounds better than Glaucon and Simon. Sorry Glaucon.
And every realist should be caught in an elevator with a positivist and a Buddhist.Glaucon,
For sure. Ultimately, this was a huge stumbling block for pure Empiricists. And of course, it became the delight of the Phenomenalists."
Hey, sometimes you have place an elephant on someone's head around here to get acknowledgement an elephant is heavy. I point at the deep footprints over and over and get told I am fruit loops. Fortunately I get along well with animals, if not Q, so when I can I ask them to sit on the occasional resistant mind.You think Q is an atheist that believes God doesn't exist? You "think"?
I thought this was as evident as an elephant in a raincoat...in the middle of Times Square...
Hey, sometimes you have place an elephant on someone's head around here to get acknowledgement an elephant is heavy. I point at the deep footprints over and over and get told I am fruit loops. Fortunately I get along well with animals, if not Q, so when I can I ask them to sit on the occasional resistant mind.
Phlogistan,
just to keep the tally running. I think Q is another atheist who believes there is no God.
You think Q is an atheist that believes God doesn't exist? You "think"?
JDawg said:If I got a message from God that I could not deny, I'd be the first to put on my happy face.
Yes atheism is a belief.
I state that because I can not prove there is no god. In such I would be making a leap of faith to say as fact that there is no god.
If you were to ask me the chance of a god, whatever my answer was, you could not prove me wrong and I couldn't prove I was right.
If that is all that is being asked. Then yes it is a belief. But it is not a religion.
JA
"... yes it is a belief. But it is not a religion."