Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sun May 03, 2020 11:24 am
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun May 03, 2020 6:17 am
IF that is your example, then it is a
scientific truth 'the earth is flat' is true.
In this 'as if' case, "
'the earth is flat' is true" is a scientific truth.
In this case [as if Scenario],
if someone insists,
" 'the earth is flat' is true"
then, he must qualify it by stating;
it is because Science verified and confirm that.
What is critical here is the qualification and condition;
thus " 'the earth is flat' is true" is a relative-objective relative upon the Scientific Method and peer review.
BUT in practice, there is no way Science would accept the above "as if" scenario that the "Earth is flat" is true.
Scientists using the Scientific Method has declared the shape of the Earth is a "oblate spheroid".
In this case, " 'the earth is a spherical oblate' is true" is not an absolute objective truth/fact, but it is still a relative objective fact.
Therefore the proposition "
'the earth is a spherical oblate' is true" because Science said so. There is not way one can claim "the Earth really is "oblate spheroid" without reference to Science or any conditions involving subjects.
In addition, scientific facts are at best
polished conjectures and will always remain so. Science can only ASSUME there is something real.
There is no way one can state the absolute ultimate Truth/Fact of what the shape of the Earth is. That the Earth "oblate spheroid" is merely a general truth, not the 'truth' since the Earth at any one time is always changing. It could be more like "oval" than spherical when it is full moon at the Equator when the tides are pull upward.
It is same for every fact, "one CANNOT state what the absolute ultimate Truth/Fact is" that is totally independent of the participation of the subjects, thus there are only relative objective facts/truth, i.e. grounded on intersubjective consensus.
What you say demonstrates the metaphysical delusion I'm talking about. It's so deep and pervasive that recognising and overcoming it is extremely hard.
Don't be too quick to jump to conclusion when,
You are the ignorant one and is delusional.
Nope what you proposed of reality, any average person or kid can understand that which is common sense but superficial.
1 When we talk about what we call 'truth', we're referring to the function of factual assertions - typically linguistic expressions - and nothing else. The things we talk about - features of reality - just are or were, neither true not false. And this applies to what scientists say about reality.
Note I had argued Science merely
ASSUMED there are things-we-talk-about - feature of reality.
Prove to me there are real things-we-talk-about - feature of reality?
I have raised numerous threads to justify this point, e.g.
viewtopic.php?f=5&t=28671
What is Really Real?
viewtopic.php?f=5&t=28996
2 The expression 'absolute truth' is as incoherent as the idea of a model that's 'right', compared with which all models are wrong. To talk about absolute truth is to entertain a fantasy, if only then to dismiss it. What could an absolutely true description contain? And since the idea of 'absolute truth' is incoherent, so is the distinction between absolute truth and relative truth.
You are proposing your experiencing of reality is absolutely real -which is nonsense and incoherent, but you are doing that ignorantly.
You are claiming there is an absolute real table out there independent of human beliefs and opinion.
I am arguing, what you are experiencing is not absolutely independent of human conditions, but inevitably you and all humans cannot extricate yourself from reality which you are part and parcel of.
Thus whatever reality you experience and expressed in relative objectivity.
3 A truth-claim - a factual assertion - is always in a descriptive context. And features of reality can be described in countless ways, for different purposes. So there can be any number of true factual assertions about a feature of reality - and that feature can be identified and categorised in any number of ways. So - that a truth-claim is relative to - dependent on - a context is trivially true and inconsequential.
I agree there can be many factual assertion about a feature of reality. This is so obvious.
E.g. I can describe the table out there in many ways using different linguistic forms or even poetry.
But that is not the point I am contending.
What I am asserting is,
the table that you are describing out there,
is an emergence and creation which you with the collective participated in enabling its existence.
note my argument here:
viewtopic.php?f=5&t=28671
In other words you are the co-creator of the reality which you in turn describes using language.
This perspective is a different 'kettle of fish' from the common sense views you are espousing.
4 To say 'the earth is an oblate spheroid' is only relatively or partially or contingently true is to be haunted by the ghost of a 'truth' that's absolute, or a perfect, complete, or ultimate description. Exorcise the ghost, and the delusion of 'relative' truth and so 'relative' objectivity evaporates.
I had stated to say the earth is oblate spheroid is merely a convenience but not reflecting reality at all.
5 As I understand it, the distinction we make between what we call subjectivity and objectivity refers to the function of assertions - not where they come from. So to say all assertions come from people, so all assertions are subjective, is to misunderstand the distinction. And, of course, it's possible to use the words 'subjective' and 'objective' in a different way, to make a different distinction.
Note I have argued, the 'where they come from' is partly from you and other humans contributing at the co-creator of that thing out there.
6 As I understand it, a subjective assertion expresses a judgement, belief or opinion, such as 'this painting is beautiful' and 'eating animals is morally wrong'. But an objective assertion expresses a factual claim about a feature of reality that may or may not be the case, such as 'some people eat animals'. So an argument as to whether a painting is or isn't beautiful, or whether eating animals is or isn't morally wrong, can never be settled by checking out the situation in reality - it boils down to a matter of judgement, and there's no factual truth or falsehood. But whether some people do or don't eat animals is a factual matter, checkable in reality, so the claim is true or false.
I had argued, that feature of reality itself that human asserts and judge about, actually emerged with you and the collective as co-creators.
7 Some scientific factual assertions - conclusions - are provisional, mainly because of the problem of induction. And scientists reach them by a process of intersubjective consensus. But that's about the way an assertion is reached and produced - about its source - which has no bearing on the function of the assertion, which, like any other factual assertion, is to claim something about a feature of reality that may or may not be the case. And that's why such an assertion is objective.
As far as Science is concerned, as stated above, Science merely ASSUMED that 'something about a feature of reality"
The best Science can do is merely based on
observation of what is deemed to be a real feature of reality but there is no way Science will ever know what that thing really is, thus it has to assume.
In this case, you are also by default assuming there is something real out there, but ignorantly jumped to conclusion hastily and imagine you are in touch with the real thing out there. This is why you are the delusional one insisting what is illusory as really real.
If not, prove you are
realizing reality as it is or whatever it is.