I know myself well enough that I know that I will like an idea that fits with what I already understand. Therefore if I am to learn a new model I'd have to ease myself into it starting with some attribute of it that I understand. Much of one's metaphysics choices simply describes who one thinks one is. Is a mathematician or physicist more free than an artist, or vice versa? Whatever, I am very keen on critical evaluation of what people in a forum like this write, and I welcome criticisms of my own ideas which if they are good,will withstand adverse criticisms. In short, my criterion for approaching the good is human freedom of thought and expression.TimeSeeker wrote: ↑Sat Oct 13, 2018 1:23 pmIt is exactly the same problem I raised about the pursuit of ontology.Belinda wrote: ↑Sat Oct 13, 2018 1:20 pmThat is true, I don't. I was trying to explain what I have found useful in the past and am avid to be taught something I like even better.TimeSeeker wrote: ↑Fri Oct 12, 2018 9:18 pm
This is only begging the question.
How do you know that what you have acquired is knowledge?
How do you tell that you have found it? Being the “true nature of reality” or “true knowledge”?
Without some criteria (values!) for what it does, what it looks like, what you can DO with it when you found it - it is all a wild goose chase.
As you said “I will like it better”
I will know it when I see it.
PS it helps to have insight into one's own prejudices.