iambiguous wrote: ↑Fri Aug 02, 2024 10:55 pm
Over and again: from my own frame of mind [which may certainly be wrong] it's not the points you raise about the points I raise about the points Hume raised but the fact that none of us were/are able to actually phrase
anything other than in how our brains compel us to.
Which is a conversation stopper., in a discussion forum.
Unless, of course, that's false. Is it? Then link us to the scientific and the philosophical arguments that you believe establish this.
1) As Phyllo points out just because we are compelled to conclude something doesn't mean it is false. 2) Unless you are sure that there is no point in reasoning about anything, then we can either actually discuss points raised, or just accept that we can never know anything. Is it really impossible for you to think something like: well, it is possibly, perhaps even likely that determinism is the case, so we can't be sure if our reasoning is correct or merely compelled. That said, I am going to reason as well as I can, in relation to points raised, while knowing that perhaps we may not be being reasonable.
You're a participant in a philosophy forum. If you are just going to use this conversation stopper, what are you doing here? And why bother quoting anyone? You could quote from flying fishing essays. Or just keep posting the same thing without quoting anyone.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2024 10:38 pmMy point was that your point is not a response to what YOU quoted. You could say it after any quote. Why bother to quote anyone, if you are going to say that? It's a conversation stopper. Same as saying 'How do we know we're not a brain in a vat? Or How do I know I am not insane? Or is it possible what seems obvious to us isn't?
Of course it can be noted after any quote. At least if "in your head" you assume that all quotes are derived from brains wholly in sync with the laws of matter.
That's the quandary in a nutshell, perhaps. We think we are quoting others of our own free will but we really have no way in which to assess that objectively.
So, you've said, hundreds of times. So, we can do our best and consider various arguments and points or just say there is no point in having a discussion.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2024 10:38 pmYou could throw these out in relation to any post. Fine, if you want to just stop discussion and even stop your own consideration of the ideas you are quote, well, it's a good strategy. Though there is absolutely no need to quote anyone. You could simply just make the assertions you keep making. Skip the pretend middle man.
All of this merely by assuming that I do have the capacity to see myself as you do. If only of my own volition I would finally stop pretending to be a serious philosopher myself?
I have no idea what this means? Does it merely assume that? Why did you bother to make a point and reason here?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2024 8:20 amFurther, Iambiguous has often made it very clear he sees a qualitative distinction between is and ought issues and questions. One can find solutions, the other, as far as he can see so far, we cannot find solutions regarding.
With determinism as some understand it, both problems and solutions [to anything] are interchangeable. And if some wish to insist that it's their solution that ultimately resolves it, well, what does it even mean to take credit for something you could never have not taken credit for?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2024 10:38 pmAnd this is a non-response.
Translation: you didn't respond to me by agreeing with me so you may as well have not responded at all.
No, that's not what saying something is a non-response means. You could disagree and that's a response. You could agree and that is a response. You could partially agree or point out some weakness in my reason. Those are responses. You basically said the same thing you have said time and again. Nothing you said responded to the distinction issue you have raised and I pointed out in what you quoted, about the difference between is and ought issues. That's why it's a non-response.
Again, as though in regard to these "metaphysical" questions, only some here are qualified to address them.
I said nothing like that at all. I wish you'd addressed the issue I raised. Find the part where I said you weren't qualified to address them.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2024 10:38 pmMy point was that in the past and recently you have drawn a distinction between moral conslusions and, for example, scientific conclusions. But if you are going to quote person after person and say 'But for all we know we are compelled to think this makes sense' THAT PRECISE QUOTE would apply to scientific conclusions also.
Exactly! Given how some understand determinism, absolutely everything that we think, feel, say and do we were never able not to. More then once I have speculated about the scientific community announcing to the world that it has finally arrived at the objective truth: we do have free will.
As though they can then prove that this announcement in and of itself was not wholly compelled by Mother Nature.
So, you finally admit that all those years of saying that is questions and answers are qualitatively different from ought questions, you were mistaken.
And anytime anyone here wants to demonstrate how their own arguments really do establish an empirical, scientific basis for autonomy, by all means, let them back them up with hard evidence.
Did you not read what you just wrote. You just wrote that even if someone did this, we couldn't know if it only seemed reasonable and a proof.
I mean, seriously. From one sentence to the next you first say, we still wouldn't know if someone showed a proof. Then you ask for a proof. I actually read what you write. I am not sure you do.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2024 8:20 amYet, here and often recently he is essentially arguing that both is and ought questions cannot be resolved. So, not just moral nihilism, but epistemological nihilism.
Look, if he wishes to insist here that how he understands me is more reasonable than how I understand myself, well, que sera, sera?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2024 10:38 pmI said that you have long made a distinction between is assertions, say in science, where you have said we can be objective, and ought assertions where, so far, you see not adequate justification for claims to objectivity.
Then the part, however, where I speculate that if the hardcore determinists are correct such distinctions are moot because both the either/or and the is/ought worlds are inherently embedded in the only possible world.
Great, so you are conceding that your long standing thousand times declaration that we can know things about is issues but not about ought issues was incorrect. You now admit this about what you posted for years and mocked people for questioning.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2024 10:38 pmIf you can't remember making that distinction, then things just go surreal. You've been making it for years.
Actually, again, going back to my exchanges with Volchok years ago at ILP, I was [to the best of my recollection] defending free will. And the surreal part [for me] revolves around "click". After all, here we are discussing something that reflects the profound ambiguities embedded in "the gap", in Rummy's Rule and in the Benjamin Button Syndrome. We take our own philosophical leaps to free will, determinism and/or compatibilism but we have no way to go beyond speculation and conjecture itself. At least not definitively.
You've said this to me before.
And there are no contradictions in a wholly determined universe because if something must unfold -- if everything can only unfold -- entirely in sync with the only possible reality then what is it about the only possible reality that is compatible with moral responsibility?
Adn this.
The bottom line [mine, here and now] is that neither the scientific community, the philosophical community nor the theological community have managed to go much beyond speculation derived from what is surely an enormous gap between what we think we know about the human brain here and how the human brain fits into the existence of existence itself.
And this.
Only the science community can fall back on the scientific method itself to examine the quandary empirically, experientially and experimentally. What is the philosophical or theological equivalent of that?
I mean, this is insane. I point out you make the distinction. You say you (no longer?) make the distinction, and here it is again. Science can lead to conclusions we can know are correct, philosophy and theology can't. This after JUST SAYING THAT EVEN SCIENTIFIC CONCLUSIONS, THOSE, WE MIGHT BE COMPELLED TO THINK ARE CORRECT.
It's like dealing with different alters in Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID).
So, all we can do is to try, try again or move on to others.
In fact, there are any number of posters here who seem adamant in commanding others to accept only their own answers. They'll go to the grave perhaps absolutely convinced there is but one answer to questions like these. In the other words, the answers that comfort and console them the most.
Sure, there are people like that. There are other people who go to their grave comfortable in the role of repeating themselves endlessly in a kind of I am victim of the universe and we can't know anything type and passive-aggresssively attacking others who don't feel the same way. Great. So we have a couple of ad homs. We can all be described in ad hom terms. So what.
Let's just say that I have no clear idea at all of what this is supposed to mean. If a conversation here stops or stops it stopped or stopped either because we did have the capacity to sustain it or to end it of our own free will or we don't.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2024 10:38 pmHere's another example...
On the other hand, if the hardcore determinists are correct, no points can be invalid.
How is that not correct if the determinists are correct?
I would say we can't be sure if they are valid or invalid. But the point is you just asserted, again, that the distinction between is and ought conclusions is not real if determinism is the case. We'd be compelled to think scientific conclusions are correct and the scientists would be compelled to make them.
So, sometimes people have better stay away from you if they think these two areas are the same, is and ought issues. Other times, you re asserting that we can't be sure at all of either, given determinims is possible.
You just don't seem to remember from one moment to the next what you are saying. I can put the two things you assert that contradict each other right next to each other and you still don't notice. In fact you do this yourself and don't notice. I'll try again not to try any kind of dialogue with you, though I will continue to point respond to some of your posts, but not the non-responses of yours to mine.