phyllo wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2024 9:24 pm
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2024 9:10 pm
phyllo wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2024 9:00 pm
What would be "beyond a philosophical argument"?
God coming down and explaining everything.
What else could it be?
He could be a brain in a vat, or having a psychotic break or determinied to interpret something other than God as God. It's fine if he thinks there is always a possibility we are mistaken, even fundamentally. I think most of us acknowledge that possibility. But the continued acting as if some could say something that fits his criteria or scientists coming here could ACTUALLY be convincing - with no explanation for how, suddenly, his brain cells are autonomous if a scientist comes here, that all doesn't make sense.
What we do isn't enough, but it's as if something could be done. Well, not according to his criteria and arguments. They leave no room for being convinced by anything or anyone doing anything, and not even the experience of God would do it. He just doesn't seem to notice this.
Yeah, you're right, there is no room for being convinced by anything or anyone.
It is a common observation that people are held responsible even when there are circumstances beyond their control ... a mentally ill arsonist for example.
Yet, this does not seem to qualify as a "demonstration beyond a philosophical argument".
In fact, no observation seems to count as evidence.
And it's not that the idea is wrong, in and of itself. Yes, even things that seem obviously correct might be wrong. That idea in and of itself and the various scenarios or possibilities are interesting to think about, at least for some people.
But if you are going to request explanations, concrete or theoretical or both, if you are going to also yourself put forward assertions about reality, especially as he often does with incredulity that something else could be the case, if you are going to say arguments of type X are not useful but if only we could get arguments or communication like Y, then they would be useful and proof, he's confused. He dismisses articles and the posts of other people without even working to understand them, and does this by repeating his own arguments or assertions for why they don't demonstrate anything. It's hypocrisy. He allows imply, mock the silliness of the beliefs of others, and assert things himself, but dismisses even vastly more carefully thought out responses and articles. He doesn't seem to notice the pass he gives himself.
In response to this being pointed out he will say that he is the first to admit he might be wrong. 1) this assumes that everyone he encounters doesn't know they might be wrong. He treats everyone as if they have asserted, when they haven't, that they cannot be wrong. 2) he doesn't seem to understand that he treats some positions himself as more likely, up to the point of incredulity that some other position could be correct. 3) he never seems to question why he would go ahead and mock others, imply their positions are wrong, state that their proofs mean nothing, label them, dismiss what they sayt, if he really believes we have no way to decide if one position is more likely than another.
The other option is to, yes, keep in the back of our minds that we might be wrong, even about obvious and fundamental things, but then to work together to see if some things seem much more likely.
Every post he creates includes reasoning, if gestural and often only slightly justified, if at all. Well, once you open the door, responding to everyone 'but you might be compelled to believe that' is farce. And he never considers it necessary to justify his responses,interpretations and assumptions in relation to other people's posts.
He could, for example, have a thread specifically focused on radical skepticism. But if we are discussing compatibilism or nihilism, etc., then using converssation killers from radical skepticism are out of place, especially when he keeps saying he would be really happy if someone came and convinced him of X or he would like to see a discussion of Y down from the theoretical clouds.
Now you quite understandibly said earlier that you would rather discuss compatibilism than discuss Iambiguous. And obviously you don't have to respond or even read my posts that are about the latter. Unfortunately, I have found the patterns in Iambiguous' posts interesting, if at times galling, because they reflect the same patterns I have in my own mind. It seems to me he doesn't want to notice what he is doing', both in the way he thinks out loud in his posts, but also interpersonally in relation to what others write. It's like a glaring version of certain types of avoidance I have in my own mind.
In any case, I chased him for a long time to respond to the posts where I presented my position. He simply attributed positions to me I did not have and did not interact with my ideas and concrete examples. He simply restated his positions.
Likely I'll find him less interesting again, since there really is nothing more I could possibly do in relation to him. So, if posts, like mine that I copy pasted to him, deal with compatibilism, I'll focus on those.