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Old 01-18-2003, 06:32 PM   #11
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Default Different is good...

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Originally posted by Oxymoron
That's a different question! Let's go back one step: in order to be a relativist, I must believe that all standpoints are equally unprivileged. How can I possibly know this?
Oxy:

I think all the relativist position reduces to is that all standpoints may be different. Experience seems to have taught us that some work better than others. What's better? Depends on your criteria. What's the best criteria? Well, we'd need criteria to determine that - how about survival, riches, social status, feeling good etc.

Bottom Line: You can only determine whether viewpoints are privileged/unprivileged by applying you own subjective, relative judgements to them. The result - your beliefs!

Cheers, John
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Old 01-18-2003, 08:52 PM   #12
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Somewhat against my better judgement I decided to answer Hugo, more for amusement then anything else. And challenge his so-called idea of a more or less "priveleged" relativism based on the "revolutionary" idea of "inter-subjectivity"(which may very well be an oxymoron). Upon which he asked that no one "attack his character" after which, in his next breadth he attempted to more or less, "poison the well" by making an indirect attack on mine:


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I want to make it clear from the outset that i do not accept this description, nor should i accept a mischaracterization provided by my opponents. This kind of formulation gives rise to the criticism exempified by Primal's comment:

quote:You cannot argue with a guy who will claim to see no tree when one is right in front of his face and you know he can see.
How sweet. And though the man never refuted my claim(with anything more then circular apeals to the concept of inter-subjectivity) and Encyclopedia definitions (which Kant it should be noted bad mouthed me for using, calling me an "Encyclopedia type", "Incapable" of thinking for myself), which if anything confirms my claim.

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As Anthony Adams has said in the Materialism thread, it is silly to identify relativism with any absolute assertion, since the dichotomy we are concerned with here is precisely absolute/relative.
LOL. But this argument only works if one is at first taking a relativist position, for an objectivist the definition works well.

Of course if we take a relativist position beforehand, no definition will work. Mainly because there is no such thing as a general definition in a relativist "system."


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Nevertheless, most criticism comes from this assumption, as in this amusing attempt . The claim that relativism is self-refuting is an interesting one, but not when it is based on the idea of an absolutist relativism.
Or based on a sort of objectivist stance in which definition cannot be arbitrarily changed. According to such a stance relativism is self-refuting whether the relativist whishes to admit this or not.

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The IEP article goes on to find common threads that we may use as a basis for our discussion:
Oh, I see. Now "absolutist" definitions are ok, cause the IEP says so.....or more likely, cause Hugo finds this conveniant.

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1) They all assert that one thing (e.g. moral values, beauty, knowledge, taste, or meaning) is relative to some particular framework or standpoint (e.g. the individual subject, a culture, an era, a language, or a conceptual scheme).
2) They all deny that any standpoint is uniquely privileged over all others.
Ok, I don't really remember ever being at odds with this definition.....

[quote] Unless anyone wishes to argue to the contrary, i shall assume that there are no difficulties with confining ourselves to a discussion of these two points. [quote]

The fact that such a definition is not "priveleged" according to a relativist.....




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1. This first objection is easily dealt with in the form we see it, as we make choices all the time without knowledge of which should be priviledged over others. I assume, therefore, that Keith is asking about demarcation criteria; i.e. given that no standpoint is priviledged over any other, how do we decide which is "best" for us? This is best answered by the concept of intersubjectivity, of which i shall provide two examples here.
Hardly an easy answer as it is very incomplete.

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The first is one i described in basic form in the Materialism thread: the concept of beauty. We are all familiar with the platitude "beauty is on the eye of the beholder", but it is surprising how few people cry "relativist!" when they hear this, it being no more than the assertion that beauty is relative to the subject. With apologies to the ladies if i give the impression of treating them like objects , let us proceed.
Well it'd be too narrow a statement for us to cry "relativist!". Who said there is no variation in objectivism.....

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I shall make the assertion to you all that Veronica Varekova is the most beautiful girl in the world. (Let us leave aside for our purposes here the question of how i could possibly know this...) I then state that she is moreover ever so slightly more beautiful than Laetitia Casta. Here i run into trouble - how i can i say "more beautiful" without an objective standard to compare them to? Suppose that i begin to discuss this concept of beauty with you, perhaps in another thread. I claim that, for example, blue eyes are more beautiful than brown and some others agree with me - already we have reached an intersubjective agreement to call blue eyes more beautiful than brown. If agreement can be reached on a number of qualities that ought to be possessed by our mythical perfect girl, we have our intersubjectively defined criteria for rating girls, a popular sport among heterosexual males. A relativist may take part in this pastime without fear of refuting himself...
Actually this fails miserably. First, because who is to say that you are really aware of what you yourself prefer? What if I say then "I don't think you find X to be most beatiful"....now how am I wrong?

Also who's to say that others are really even agreeing? Who's to say they exist at all?

Also even if the statement somehow reaches a level of "intersubjectivity"....a sort of oxymoron as the very existence of such is in need of none subjective verification, so what? Who's to say a statement is now "better" or "best" because it is intersubjective? To apeal here to intersubjectivity is circular.

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My second example concerns the concept of human rights. There has been much noise made about the objective or otherwise existence of such rights, or whether they are of God or the Devil. Let us suppose that, in my case, i am sitting in front of a fire one night conducting armchair philosophizing, when it occurs to me, being a public-spirited fellow, that the world would be a better place in my opinion if everyone had basic human rights that were acknowledged by all and enforced by law. I do not care in the slightest whether this position is justifiable ultimately by reference to God or Objective Morality or pragmatic considerations; i decide, for whatever reasons, that human rights are the way ahead. The next day i set about attempting to persuade you all that you should agree that the world would be a better place with my idea; perhaps i now refer to pragmatism, or God if you are religiously inclined, or perhaps i try force of rhetoric. If i succeed in gaining significant agreement then i may petition parliament, or try to publicize my ideas to a wider audience. Eventually i may succeed in achieving a declaration of recognition of human rights from some suitably high authority that my idea makes a difference. All the while, human rights need not be based on anything more than an intersubjective agreement to agree as to what kind of world we want for ourselves and how best to bring it about.
Problem is that you are still defining "intersubjective" by examples, which are inconclusive.

Also again, making lots of assumptions any one of which may merely be disgarded at any time. What if I say...you cannot even justify the propositions to yourself? Or, "without higher authority...your claim is worthless".

Another problem is your whole ideal is itself open to self-refutation still, many can agree that the idea of intersubjectivity is bunk....what then?

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2. Keith's second question is a good one, and prompts us to look back at the relativist denial that any standpoint should be priviledged. It does not follow, however, that reason must be abandoned by our intrepid relativist. While rationalists may indeed asert that positions supported by reason ought to be privileged, reason itself is a tool which may be used whenever we wish.
Yes I see what you are saying. The relativist may arbitrarily accept reason as well as disgard it. However if reason is really no more useful then Bible quoting, there really is no point. You still haven;t actually justified anything but merely accepted it arbitrarily. Likewise a person can do so with the Bible arbitrarily, that is what is meant when Keith and others says relativism makes all claims and standards equal. Keith is not saying you are physically incapable then of adopting reason arbitrarily, only that you cannot establish reason as non arbitrary or less then another standard, after the fact.


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If i consider it useful to employ reason as a criterion of validity i may do so, once again based on an intersubjective agreement to agree that arguments supported by reason are "better" than those that aren't. Nowhere do i need to suppose that reason is the absolute standard by which validity is defined.
Yeah ok, and a rationalis relativist can simply declare reason absolute. A christian relativist can declare reason bankrupt. And lastly a religious relativist can define reason as "that which stems from true spiritutality." And no claim can technically, in a non arbitrary manner, be declared more accurate then another. Relativism thus fails to establish reason, just as it fails to establish anything else including itself.

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3. Given that our relativist need not abandon reason, the answer to how he may defend a standpoint may of course include reason.
That is a point of contention. I don't believe reason can operate in an arbitrary system on an arbitrary basis. That is to suppose reason operates in an arbitrary manner or somehow, magically, becomes objective though it stems from the arbitrary(which is impossible). Hence I don't believe a relativist can really employ reason at all as a relativist, however they may easily claim to do so.


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Consider also that justification is based on argument from accepted foundations, these themselves earlier accepted on the basis of argument from accepted foundations, and so on. Hence the antifoundationalist critique in modern epistemology
That is ridiculous. Mainly because foundations in the past actually saw the regress model as proof for foundationalism. In reality, the regress model proves nothing, it only explains things. And to argue from such a model is inherently circular.

The fact is you are ignoring one of three possibilities: that some foundations are justified without inference i.e. are self-evident.



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and the questions that bother relativists: how can we come between language and the world (Wittgenstein)? How can there be a privileged "God's-eye view" (Putnam)? How can it make sense "to say what the objects of a theory are, beyond saying how to interpret it or reinterpret that theory in another" (Quine)? How can the signified not be "already in the position of the signifier" (Derrida)? Isn't it the case that "whether we take the signified or the signifier, language has neither ideas nor sounds that existed before the linguistic system, but only conceptual and phonic differences that have issued from the system" (Saussure)? Doesn't that mean that "every concept is inscribed in a chain or in a system within which it refers to the others, to other concepts, by means of a systematic play of differences" (Derrida again)? Is Rorty right that "since there is nothing beyond vocabularies which serves as a criterion of choice between them, criticism is a matter of looking on this picture and on that, not of comparing both pictures with the original"?
So basically is your critique of objectivism based on some sort of extreme version of LRH? But doesn't such a criticism assume objectivism to be false and LRH to be true before hand?

As for the statement "what came first, a linguistic system or the language?", they arose together most likely, as primtive sounds and abilities to communicate in a Darwinian manner from social animals, then to intermediaries and finally to full blown language as we know it. Basically the veru argument rests of some idea of Irreducible complexity in regards to language.

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In a sense, relativism strips away the power (cf. Foucault) associated with ontologies and democratizes concepts such as truth.
Or it merely pretends to.



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Some people are concerned at criticism of foundationalism because they think that truth by intersubjective agreement may result in agreement about "bad" things, like Nazism, but this merely tells us that if we want a better world for ourselves we shall have to work for it, convincing others along the way that Nazism is bad but human rights are good.
How? By means of apeals to inter-subjective agreement which is not there? By means of arbitrary assumptions?

If the Nazis were the majority then it'd seem like intersubjective beliefs were already set against the idea of human rights.

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4. A relativist's choice of standpoint is no more arbitrary than anyone else's, unless he makes decisions by throwing a die. None of the possible standpoints may be priviledged over the others, but some are more useful than others in achieving specific aims. For example, i stand more chance of convincing Keith in debate by appealing to reason; for a neo-Nazi, i'd probably need recourse to rhetoric. Neither can it be said that refusing to priviledge any standpoint over another makes them all equal unless we are chasing the spectre of absolutism.
Actually throwing a die in the context of relativism would not make a position any more arbitrary. Also your idea of what is or is not "useful" or whether or not some things are more "useful" then others; is merely an arbitrary assumption. I can claim with equal "validity" that rhetoric is more useful for Keith and reason for Neo-Nazis. Or I can just say the idea of usefulness is flawed. You seem here to be basing the idea of utility on empirical standards, however the empirical itself simply has no warrant in a relativist system.



The fact is this presentation of relativism: 1) Assumed relativism was true on the onset.

2) Merely attempted to defend the idea that relativism is self-refuting with arguments just as self-refuting(such as those from intersubjectivity).

3) Had many non sequiters, like the idea that the regress model somehow "disproved" foundationalism.

4) Seems to imply that there are only two choices in the manner: absolutism or relativism. Either all beliefs are absolute or all are relative.

If it were but that simple though. Why can't for example some claims be absolute(closed to variation) like those of math, and others be more open to variation(like those of taste)? This is why though I'm not an absolutist I cannot agree to the relativist claim that "all beliefs or standards are relative".

Perhaps all beliefs are not verified by any standpoint but by their intrinsic worth. Perhaps the word "standpoint" needs to be more precise. I imagine for example we'd be in agreement if we said "all knowledge is within the standpoint of the mind." Most definately. However does that necessarily imply that "all standards in the mind are equal, or all contents accurate"? Here I'd have to take contention.

Likewise even if a statement varies, that does not mean all viewpoints are equally privelegdged. The statements of a biologist for example, as well as the scientific method are obviously more priveleged then the statements of Duane Gish and creationist methods when it comes to debates over evolutionary theory.

Lastly, even still a position if there is variation can be considered prileged by the self to the self, provided there is an absolute framework. This would allow for variation without any self-refutation,as the "privelege" of the claim to the self is considered objective.

Thus in place of a self-refuting relativism or dogmatic absoltism, we have an objectivism that allows for variation. That is for example the sort of system I adhere to.

In essence then, it would be nice and I suspect we all long for a single system that would answer all questions concerning knowledge, existology and morality. Relativism provides such an easy answer (its all choice) as does absolutism(its all Gods word etc.)

An example is while a relativist may view an epistemic issue as "all arbitrary" and an absolutist as "perfect knowledge given by God." An objectivist will have to realize there are some claims provisional and some claims not. In which case justification comes not from a simple statement or creed, but by much unerlying rationale.



However reality is not that simple. And in reality not all claims can be treated or justified in the same manner. In this event such an open-ended objectivism fits very well.
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Old 01-18-2003, 10:30 PM   #13
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pages: False. Relativism can also be said to be the result of observation and analysis.

Sure, which is why I added a few “etceteras,” and the result of observation and analysis may lead to a deep skepticism of the possibility of Plato’s Philosophy Proper (i.e. Truth, Justice, Good, and Etc.). If it is false, you have yet to explain why. Does your disagreement mean that the concepts of truth/moral actions are not subject to skepticism at all in order to achieve a relativist position? Observation and analysis are names of activities that lead to conclusions, which may be any of those ‘isms.’

A person who is brave enough to recognize that the beliefs he grew up with are no longer indubitable, or free of doubts, will develop a mood for skepticism. He will begin to recognize what Aristotle did in the Nicomachean Ethics: "Fire burns both in Hellas and in Persia; but men's ideas of right and wrong vary from place to place." By observation he will notice the diversity in social environments, and begin to evaluate how social environment is related to the contents of belief of what is and what ought to be the case. From the wealth of information at hand, the person may conclude that there are no universal standards for moral beliefs. After this activity the person, having the mood of skepticism, is capable of doubting basic beliefs, i.e. common sense or natural beliefs of the animal, and question the possibility of objective knowledge of anything independent of the knower. Hence, it is necessarily by way of skepticism does a person become a relativist.



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pages: I think I understand what you are getting at, but the concept of (our perception of) an object free from epistemic impurities seems oxymoronic! Of course, you will probably label me as a radical skeptic because I'm looking at espistemic knowledge in the "context of whatever is in question".
The word object also refers to a concept, a notion, an idea, a name, or a symbol the radical skeptic refuses to isolate. An object free of epistemic impurities is not an oxymoron- it’s a phrase designed to describe the ‘indubitable,’ ‘clear and distinct ideas,’ or a foundation of any foundationalist enterprise, which is what most thinkers have done in the history of philosophy – build grand system.

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pages: Following through, one might conclude that the radicalness of any skepticism is relative to (i.e. a function of) how abstract the context has become. This is the case of the very radical skeptic examining the relations between the contexts. I would continue, but I doubt it would eliminate the pollution of experience from my mind.
A radical skeptic would be able to withhold judgment or ascertain beliefs in the Pyrrhonian manner. I did not want to get into the specifics, though, of ancient skepticism. Moreover, I doubt it’s necessary to defend the ‘pollution of experience,’ anyway.

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pages: I followed the link to Russell's theory of descriptions. Thanks. I would like to point out, however, that no F is G in fact. An F may be considered a G during the process of perception and we can intersubjectively agree that F is in fact G for the purpose of identification.
That is a social activity – and one that leads to the archetypes of common sense beliefs. If i understand you: once we describe a certain state of affairs as F, and determine its relation to another state of affairs, described as G, then we can establish the relation between two disparate concepts and describe that relation as 'is.'

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Old 01-18-2003, 10:44 PM   #14
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Primal screams: How sweet. And though the man never refuted my claim(with anything more then circular apeals to the concept of inter-subjectivity) and Encyclopedia definitions (which Kant it should be noted bad mouthed me for using, calling me an "Encyclopedia type", "Incapable" of thinking for myself), which if anything confirms my claim.
Sweet Jesus, irrespective of whether that is true or not, what does this have to do with you and Hugo?

There is no need to refer to our little fun and games, unless you bear some psychological scars from that little party, and feel the need to play the persecuted card.
:boohoo:
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Old 01-18-2003, 10:53 PM   #15
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Why does it bother you so much? Kinda hypocritical of you to make such a stink about it.

Oh yes before I forget:

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Old 01-18-2003, 11:25 PM   #16
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Primed: Why does it bother you so much? Kinda hypocritical of you to make such a stink about it.
Since it has been a few months and you first bring it up in passing, you obviously can't get over it. Even more puzzling you avoid the question posed.

At least, give it a try.

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Primed: Oh yes before I forget: ~Materialist~

For your information, the last vestiges of materialism disappeared along with Locke's mythical substratum over 200 years ago. A bit slow on the uptake, are we?

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Old 01-19-2003, 02:33 AM   #17
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Hmmm... Already there's too much going on for me to keep up. Still, i'll try my best to answer what i can.

Before i say anything else, it should be noted that this thread began by answering Keith's questions, which were of the form "given relativism, how can you do x"; i intended to move on to demonstrating that relativism is not self-refuting as soon as i could, but it seems that will have to wait for another thread now, or until everyone is happy that the discussion thus far has run its course...

Oxymoron:

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That's a different question! Let's go back one step: in order to be a relativist, I must believe that all standpoints are equally unprivileged. How can I possibly know this?
Kantian has already dealt with this objection, showing how a denial of knowledge is not a knowledge claim. Alternatively, a relativist could come to this idea by way of antifoundationalism, in which case your only rejoinder could be to foundationalism. Alas, that is dying a death!

Seriously, i'll come back to your problem when i'm able to post regarding relativism not being self-refuting. Please have patience while i take on the not-so-sensible criticism.

John Page:

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You quoted the above from IEP. I would like to make a distinction between:

a) a point of view as "opinion" and
b) point of view as in "viewpoint"
I appreciate your point, John, but i had hoped to show those who dismiss relativism in a knee-jerk fashion (see below) that those they castigate as relativists understand their position somewhat differently. Nevertheless, your point is well taken: it is of course not my place to demand that the discussion follow one route and not another.

Primal:

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Somewhat against my better judgement I decided to answer Hugo...
How about talking to me, Primal, instead of at me?

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more for amusement then anything else.
Maybe you should set up a poll? I'm confident that people are laughing, but not at me.

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challenge his so-called idea of a more or less "priveleged" relativism based on the "revolutionary" idea of "inter-subjectivity"(which may very well be an oxymoron)
Evidently you didn't read my post at all. :banghead: Where did you get this straw man? On second thoughts - don't answer.

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Upon which he asked that no one "attack his character" after which, in his next breadth he attempted to more or less, "poison the well" by making an indirect attack on mine
No, i showed the kind of objection that arises from an idea of relativism that isn't shared by those who are called or call themselves relativists. Why would i need to poison the well, in any case: you are doing a fine job by yourself of embarrassing yourself...

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And though the man never refuted my claim
This claim?

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You cannot argue with a guy who will claim to see no tree when one is right in front of his face and you know he can see.
I leave it to the audience: who considers this claim worth refuting?

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LOL. But this argument only works if one is at first taking a relativist position, for an objectivist the definition works well.
Notice how you laugh at comments others passed over. I wonder why?

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Or based on a sort of objectivist stance in which definition cannot be arbitrarily changed. According to such a stance relativism is self-refuting whether the relativist whishes to admit this or not.
Echoes of 99Percent here, methinks...

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Oh, I see. Now "absolutist" definitions are ok, cause the IEP says so.....or more likely, cause Hugo finds this conveniant.
Don't you think it's rude to talk about me like i'm not part of the discussion? Notice also that you are the only one calling the IEP entry absolutist. Perhaps you need to wait for the lower intellects to catch up?

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Actually this fails miserably. First, because who is to say that you are really aware of what you yourself prefer? What if I say then "I don't think you find X to be most beatiful"....now how am I wrong?
This is a struggle for you, isn't it? If you understood intersubjectivity as well as you suppose you do, you'd realize that your objections are empty. Let's suppose i really don't know what i prefer, and that you do - our discussions may continue as before, with the same agreement to agree being reached. This kind of thing occurs in politics all the time.

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Also who's to say that others are really even agreeing? Who's to say they exist at all?
Perhaps a solipsist has the advantage of reaching agreement quicker!

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Who's to say a statement is now "better" or "best" because it is intersubjective?
You didn't follow at at, eh? Blue eyes are better for me if i prefer them; they are better for a group if we have reached an intersubjective agreement on the matter. Call this circular if you like, but it'll only be you doing so.

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Problem is that you are still defining "intersubjective" by examples, which are inconclusive.
No, i am assuming that most people in the philosophy forum already understand the concept and using examples of its usage with regard to relativism to answer Keith's questions. In any case, my examples are hardly inconclusive - the question of human rights and their adoption by the UN and EU was decided in just this manner.

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What if I say...you cannot even justify the propositions to yourself? Or, "without higher authority...your claim is worthless".
Prefering something over another thing is enough for intersubjective justification - sorry you can't keep up. Also, intersubjective agreement is already a higher authority, the scale merely being determined by the level of agreement. Once again, there are more than enough examples in politics and international relations for your objections to be ridiculous.

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Another problem is your whole ideal is itself open to self-refutation still, many can agree that the idea of intersubjectivity is bunk....what then?
It depends on the level of disagreement. If i argue that you are a jackass but find no support, my claim will find no intersubjective validity. If i'm trying to explain Rorty to a gaggle of foundationalists i'm likely to struggle. Unfortunately the "tyranny" of democracy will take care of such objection if i am successful in convincing a majority. On a related note, i suspect this is where most difficulty with relativism and antifoundationalism springs from...

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However if reason is really no more useful then Bible quoting, there really is no point.
Lost you again! When reason is more useful than Bible quoting, i can use it. But wait! -

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Keith is not saying you are physically incapable then of adopting reason arbitrarily, only that you cannot establish reason as non arbitrary or less then another standard, after the fact.
After what fact? We can use intersubjective agreement to priviledge reason or call it our standard of justification without becoming foundationalists or presupposing that reason is intrinsically more valid as a demarcation criterion than Bible quoting. Feel free to disagree, but at least make the effort to follow me first...

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Relativism thus fails to establish reason, just as it fails to establish anything else including itself.
At last we get to the heart of the matter. Let me make this clear and say it slowly so you can understand: relativism... doesn't... want... to... establish... anything. It isn't another form of foundationalism in conflict with yours. Keith's questions asked about justification in the light of relativism and they apply equally well to justification sans foundationalism. Why don't you stop seeing things through your foundationalist spectacles and try to appreciate someone else's position for a change? :banghead:

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Hence I don't believe a relativist can really employ reason at all as a relativist, however they may easily claim to do so.
Please. For the last time: i don't believe that reason is intrinsically priviledged as a demarcation criteria, but i can use it as such if intersubjective agreement is reached that it is the "best" such standard.

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That is ridiculous.
Name-dropping time! If it's ridiculous, please post an essay explaining why the work of the following thinkers is in error. I will forward your essay to as many of them as i can (i.e. if they're alive!). So: Rorty, Derrida, Sellars, Wittgenstein, Davidson, Putnam, Kuhn, Eagleton, Goodman, Foucault, Nietzsche, Vattimo, Feyerabend, Toulmin, Fish and Quine. Don't forget the criticism of Dennett, Habermas, Adorno, and so on. What a waste of effort, given that antifoundationalism is ridiculous! :notworthy

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The fact is you are ignoring one of three possibilities: that some foundations are justified without inference i.e. are self-evident.
Ah! The myth of the given! Perhaps i was ignoring it - can you guess why?

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So basically is your critique of objectivism based on some sort of extreme version of LRH?
Nice try. How about answering some of those questions i posted that bother relativists?

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Or it merely pretends to.
:banghead: Where is the ontological power associated with relativism?

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If the Nazis were the majority then it'd seem like intersubjective beliefs were already set against the idea of human rights.
That's the point.

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I can claim with equal "validity" that rhetoric is more useful for Keith and reason for Neo-Nazis. Or I can just say the idea of usefulness is flawed. You seem here to be basing the idea of utility on empirical standards, however the empirical itself simply has no warrant in a relativist system.
No. Keith is (or was...) and Objectivist; ergo, i have to bear this in mind when deciding how to argue with him. That was my point and it really is a simple one.

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The fact is this presentation of relativism: 1) Assumed relativism was true on the onset.
I clearly stated this at the beginning. Try again.

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2) Merely attempted to defend the idea that relativism is self-refuting with arguments just as self-refuting(such as those from intersubjectivity).
Wrong again. I also stated that i would post subsequently, showing that relativism was not self-refuting, but that initially i would deal with Keith's questions about the consequences of relativism. In any case, Kantian has already dealt with this - why don't you address his post? (Just after Oxymoron's, FYI.) Or are you still afraid of him after the beating you took last time?

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3) Had many non sequiters, like the idea that the regress model somehow "disproved" foundationalism.
Wrong. I gave that point as an example of why antifoundationalism has interested so many people. This thread is not a discussion of the soundness or otherwise of foundationalism.

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4) Seems to imply that there are only two choices in the manner: absolutism or relativism. Either all beliefs are absolute or all are relative.
I don't recall setting up this dichotomy. Perhaps you have priviledged access to what i'm thinking?

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In essence then, it would be nice and I suspect we all long for a single system that would answer all questions concerning knowledge, existology and morality.
Not everyone longs for the safety of the herd. :boohoo:

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Relativism provides such an easy answer (its all choice)
Easy? You call this easy?

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(Rorty) Fear of relativism seems to me the fear that there is nothing in the universe to hang on to except each other.
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In this event such an open-ended objectivism fits very well.
So you say. Please leave your objectivism out of this.

To all:

As i said in my initial post, i'm trying to side with a minority idea for the benefit of discussion. If Primal's talking about me as though i'm not here continues, my participation will not. If everyone else appreciates the spirit of the endeavour, i'll merely put him on my ignore list.
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Old 01-19-2003, 04:25 AM   #18
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Originally posted by Hugo Holbling
......
As i said in my initial post, i'm trying to side with a minority idea for the benefit of discussion. If Primal's talking about me as though i'm not here continues, my participation will not. If everyone else appreciates the spirit of the endeavour, i'll merely put him on my ignore list.
I think most of us do appreciate both your spirit of your endevour, and your patience.
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Old 01-19-2003, 05:22 AM   #19
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Originally posted by Primal

As for the statement "what came first, a linguistic system or the language?", they arose together most likely, as primtive sounds and abilities to communicate in a Darwinian manner from social animals, then to intermediaries and finally to full blown language as we know it. Basically the veru argument rests of some idea of Irreducible complexity in regards to language.
Most likely this view is completely incorrect.
Language as a sub-set of communication is defined by the presence of grammar.
Grammar has never been shown to exist for any other living creature (even the chimp and ape experiments are most dubious; the only animal I'm aware of, seriously, that might display grammar in communication naturally is the Carribean Reef Squid, on which there has been some research).

Grammatical and non-grammatical communication in humans have completely differing neurological bases; i.e., they have bugger all to do with each other.

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An example is while a relativist may view an epistemic issue as "all arbitrary" and an absolutist as "perfect knowledge given by God." An objectivist will have to realize there are some claims provisional and some claims not. In which case justification comes not from a simple statement or creed, but by much unerlying rationale.
No, it doesn't come from "underlying rationale" with objectivism, it comes from underlying presuppositionalism.

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Somewhat against my better judgement I decided to answer Hugo, more for amusement then anything else.....
Can we leave such pointless bickering out of this and concentrate on the philosophy ?
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Old 01-19-2003, 06:15 AM   #20
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Lightbulb Moving on...

In an attempt to move the discussion forward, here is Habermas explaining why relativist refusal to priviledge viewpoints is not self-refuting (or, if you prefer, why it does not require a God's-eye view to make Putnam's claim that "there is no God's-eye view"), taken from his essay on Rorty in Rorty and his critics:

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Since the truth of beliefs or sentences can in turn be justified only with the help of other beliefs and sentences, we cannot break free from the magic circle of our language. This fact suggests an anti-foundationalist conception of knowledge and a holistic conception of justification. Because we cannot confront our sentences with anything that is not itself already saturated linguistically, no basic propositions can be distinguished that would be priviledged in being able to legitimate themselves, thereby serving as the basis for a linear chain of justification. Rorty rightly emphasizes "that nothing counts as justification unless by reference to what we already accept," concluding from this "that there is no way to get outside our beliefs and our language so as to find some test other than coherence".
(Of course he then goes on to criticize coherence... )

Alternatively, we have Kantian's argument previously.

Chances are i won't be able to post at all tomorrow. I'd therefore like to see Habermas taken on in the meantime so that i can see the particular problems that folk have with relativism in order to address them later.
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