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11-08-2011, 03:37 PM | #61 | ||
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How should I address it? It does not look very helpful. You have evidences and postulates in separate boxes, which feed into a "black box theory generator" which I assume means that you don't know how the theory is formulated, that turns out conclusions. What is this supposed to illustrate? How do you test this? You claim that the "postulates" cannot be refuted by the evidence, but otherwise it's not clear where they come from. |
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11-08-2011, 03:47 PM | #62 | |||
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If that is not in fact the same as mountainman's position, perhaps some clarification would be in order. |
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11-09-2011, 04:15 PM | #63 | ||||
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(1) Each evidence item En (which we may consider to be a registry item only) has with it associated a series of postulates (or hypotheses) not all of which may be agreed to by all the various theorists, but which neverthess effectively represent a "package" of hypothetical attributes related to each and every evidence item within the "Black Box". (2) Additionally, general postulates (or hypotheses) are introduced into the list of postulates which are not necessarily related to the evidence items En to be discussed. In some cases these are derived from analysis of patterns in the overall evidence. Thus deductive and inductive reasoning also works outside the "black box" in the identification, formulation, refinement and comparsion of the postulates in accordance to McCullaugh's cited analysis. Quote:
It illustrates that what appears to many people on the surface as one (or a few) summary overview hypotheses (known on the surface as the theory or the major hypothesis) is in fact, under the surface, a very deep ocean of detailed hypotheses associated with the evidence, all of which are (in theory) continually compared with each other and ranked, tested against evidence, revised with new evidence, etc, etc in accordance to McCullaugh's process. Quote:
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11-09-2011, 04:27 PM | #64 | ||
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See post # 63 above. |
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11-09-2011, 05:26 PM | #65 | |||
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Thank Christ. Quote:
I have far more respect for those theorists who clearly just started with the HJ postulate as an explicit working hypothesis, than for those theorists who conjure up an HJ as a theoretical conclusion based on an extremely small and very suspicious set of evidence and an extremely vast set of postulates related specifically to those evidence items. I am sure that there may be theorists here who disagree with me on this issue because they think that their extremely vast set of postulates related specifically to that extremely small and very suspicious set of evidence items are accurate assumptions, and that the conclusion of the HJ follows - in fact may be logically inferred - from their postulates about the evidence. |
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11-09-2011, 05:32 PM | #66 | ||||||||
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Have you said anything here at all? Yes, theories are based on evidence, the evidence needs to be evaluated as to its trustworthiness and relevance. Are you trying to confuse or clarify things? What conclusions would you draw from this? |
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11-09-2011, 05:40 PM | #67 | |||
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We might say they enjoyed (if they were lucky) a different conceptual framework of reality. Quote:
Emperor worship and cult was part of this "brainwashing". The argument from authority was a very pragmatic logical construct with plenty of weight behind it. The common people could often see the "logic" in adherance to the argument from authority. Quote:
What's changed Shesh? Pete |
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11-09-2011, 05:48 PM | #68 | ||||||
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We may assume that deductive and inductive reasoning occurs INSIDE the black box, and operates on whatever is INPUT to the box, which is mainly postulates about the evidence items.
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Clarify. Quote:
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11-09-2011, 06:03 PM | #69 | ||
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I don't think that this thread has clarified anything. |
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11-09-2011, 06:16 PM | #70 | ||||
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For example take an epigraphic item "Inscription of Abercius" or a fragmentary manuscript item such as P.Oxy. 3035. Associated with these two example items of evidence is a vast series of discussion which is resolvable to a list of postulates or hypotheses held about that one single item. My claim is that McCullaugh's set of criteria are also used for testing models of the hypotheses which are put forward to deal with each separate item of evidence. Its equivalent to the microcosm and the macrocosm working with the one set of criteria. Quote:
BTW, how do those scholars who treat the HJ as an assumption view the attempts of the other scholars to reconstruct an HJ as a conclusion based on the evidence, such as it is? And vice versa? Do you happen to know? |
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