Logik wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 6:15 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 5:26 pm
That's Karl Popper. He's only one voice, and his epistemology has some flaws. It was probably better than verificationism, but not ultimately the right answer.
However, what's clear is that negation isn't the only epistemological "game in town."
If you know what the "right" answer is - you would tell us instead of beating around the bush.
I was only pointing out that "negating" isn't epistemology -- it's but one possible strategy among many.
Negation is the most important game in town.
I don't think so. Descartes showed us that negation can take you to the point where you know nothing at all, save perhaps for your own existence. But even that remains uncertain as to what you are. In other words, being cynical if that's all one does, takes one not to knowledge but to a state of knowing essentially nothing at all.
Going out of one's way to prove oneself wrong is counter-intuitive to most humans.
Yes, but philosophers try not to be "intuitive" in that way. They're famous for thinking about and casting doubt upon whatever others simply take for granted.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 5:26 pm
No, not at all, of course. But I am suggesting that when one is in a forest, one might observe trees.
When one is in a forest one might observe the most pertinent threat to one's well being.
Ah. I see the irony was lost.
What I was suggesting is that the one thing you can certainly find in the forest is a whole lot of trees. Just so, when one is in the midst of things one knows, one would be unwise to focus exclusively on those things that appear problematic, as if they made everything else disappear. The problematic cases may well be far fewer than the obvious things. It is often so.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 5:26 pm
My claim was more modest: it was that you can't prove that sufficient correspondence doesn't exist. That's a subtle difference, but ultimately one of real import.
It's ultimately a difference of sophistry. You are asking us to prove a negative.
It wasn't my "ask." It was the supposition of anyone who works only on the negative side of epistemology. But you're right that they couldn't possibly prove their cynicism is actually correct. That is indeed an old problem with negatives. They don't prove things.
Your map is "right" and continue to be "right" until reality provides evidence to the contrary.
Now you're agreeing with what I suggested. You're positing the existence of both "map" and "reality." You're checking the former against the latter.
it's easier to avoid stupidity than seeking brilliance.
Yes. It's very, very easy to be negative. Too easy. And it builds nothing. Being brilliant is much, much harder than being a cynic. Being a contributor of something positive is far harder than just negating what everybody else tries to do. But what conclusion should we draw from that? That being brilliant, positive or creative is bad? And being cynical, negative and merely deconstructive is good? Hardly.
And so ethics (risk management) is first and foremost - about survival. Otherwise - what's it for?
If ethics were about "survival," the only ethic would be, "Don't be at the back of the herd." All else would be up for grabs.
But that's not ethics. Gazelles do that on the Masi Mara, and they have no ethics at all. Humans can do better. Ethics is about good and evil, regardless of convenience, desire or even, sometimes, of survival.
Environmentalists are short-term thinkers.
Funny: that's what they say about us.
There is no trajectory on which Earth remains Human-home forever. No matter how "sustainable" we become. No matter how "organic" we eat. There will come a point at which this planet WILL become uninhabitable - whether through our doing; or through the universe's doing. Ask the dinosaurs.
Well, how about this thought: long before heat death happens, you and I will be dead too. That drive for survival is a race you and I are going to lose. As the old quip goes, "The mortality rate around here is 100% -- everybody dies."
So what is the real value of "survival," if that's all we do? Maybe we should be up to something more valuable while we're "surviving," no?
Once we have 100 planets to habitate.
Who is "we"? You and i will have passed long before that happens. And had we a million such planets, they'd still have death on all of them.
No. I mean YOU don't have to decide. I am under the impression that you lack the anatomy to become pregnant.
Let those who have the anatomy decide.
Last time I checked, conception was a two person activity. And last time I checked, you're on the legal hook for what you contribute to.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 3:21 pm
It reduces everything, not just crime. It eliminates good people and geniuses too. That's the wondrous thing about abortion -- you never really know whom you're killing. In fact, it eliminates whole populations, when they fail to reproduce at a rate of replacement. And it eliminates far more women than men, which further impairs overall population sustenance. It's a kind of social suicide, really...not a good thing.
While population growth is on the exponential rise it's far from a "social suicide".[/quote]
It's not
species-suicide, perhaps. But it is most certainly
social suicide...your society will not survive if you do not procreate and pass it on to the next generation. Whatever comes in its place will not be your society.
To make the "we need more geniuses" argument is basically a strategy based on winning the lottery. You think genius is nature, not nurture. Might as well preach for eugenics now.
No, I was just pointing out that when you kill babies, you have no idea whom you're killing. It could be Hitler or Albert Einstein, or a Rembrandt or a criminal. You just never know.
Did you ever wonder if the person who would have grown up to cure cancer, AIDS or some other dread disease was perhaps dispatched into a garbage pail in the back of some abortion place?
And lastly: how would you even enforce anti-abortion laws? How are you going to prevent a teenage girl from going to the black market to seek an abortion?
You're never going to do that. People will always do evil. But in a moral society, one should not encourage murder. Since the vast majority of abortions are purely convenience abortions, a lot of lives could be saved. But we're not trying.
Precision and control again. You can't control individuals as effectively as you can control masses.
This is true. Masses have no conscience. Only individuals do.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 3:21 pm
Good luck. There's not enough information about me out there for anybody to know. And I try to avoid
ad hominem arguments, even in my own favour.
Your words reveal more than you know.
I'd be surprised if that were true.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 3:21 pm
No, it's because I want them to know what they're doing, and not to die being foolish. I kind of want them to stay around.
And so you are going to teach them to "not be stupid" or what? Learning is not a process that works by wishful thinking.
No, but trial with no theory ends up being fatal.
In 1800 there is no book you could have read that can teach you ANYTHING about aerodynamics. SOMEBODY had to learn it SOMEHOW.
Not true. The problem of flight long predated the Wright brothers. Nobody had solved it, but even DaVinci had had a try. And "lighter than air" craft, like balloons, were already well known. There was lots of theory; it was just incomplete.