Univalence wrote: ↑Sat May 18, 2019 5:50 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat May 18, 2019 5:41 pm
What have you read? Let's talk particulars.
Lets talk particulars after you have shared your epistemic criteria for authenticity with me.
It will be very easy to illustrate, if we use particulars. Which books would you like to start by comparing?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat May 18, 2019 5:41 pm
Well, it really needs to, because that's the truth.
What is your epistemic criterion for "truth" ? [/quote]
In context, I mean it's something that will be really so, regardless of our opinions.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat May 18, 2019 5:33 pm
It can only be one or the other.
Yes, but that's not how epistemology works.
It is when you have a true dichotomy. The light switch is on, or its off. The man is dead, or he is alive. I know, I don't know.
These things don't have degrees, because even a little bit of "on-ness" or "life" is sufficient to say the light is on, or the man's still alive.
In this case, aliens are your actual hypothesis, or merely a hypothetical imagining. You consider them a fact, or you consider them fiction. True dichotomy. No third option.
Perhaps I should ask you this: which one is a more outlandish hypothesis?
A. A technologically advanced alien race can do things humans find "miraculous".
B. God did it.
Easy. "B" is obviously better, because "A" doesn't answer the question of where they aliens come from; it just moves it one step back in a logical regress. "B" refers to a First Cause, so answers the question and stops the infinite regress. So even just from a structural point of view, "B" is better as a hypothesis.
Now, proving the truth of the hypothesis is a different question, of course. But we can work on that.