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01-22-2003, 08:30 AM | #101 | |||||||||
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Leave the children to play...
In light of the arrival of a few people prepared to make the required effort, i'll try again.
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I wonder if you'd mind appending your comments on the quote from Habermas? Also, i found the following quote today while reading Stanley Fish, in which he gives Kramer's precis of Derrida's contribution to the debate on relativism, and would appreciate your consideration: Quote:
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I'll be glad to discuss whether or not demarcation criteria can be found and applied in the light of relativism, but i'm leaving objective or Objective anything for elsewhere. Quote:
Thanks for addressing Habermas, at any rate. |
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01-22-2003, 09:40 AM | #102 |
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It was probably a mistake for me to participate in this thread in the first place, I have enough drains on my time to not have to respond to 4-5 people on relativism vs objectivism.
Would one person like to participate in a formal debate on the subject? |
01-22-2003, 11:00 AM | #103 | |
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Re: Nial
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I would love to argue with you on the subject, but I can't extract enough out of your posts to be more than assertions. |
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01-22-2003, 12:14 PM | #104 | |||||
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Re: Truth and reality cannot be relative.
I find it eerie how close my view is to yours in this post, right up to the last step where we take opposite turns.
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I agree with you almost completely, right up to the last sentence. I think the last sentence hides a lot of the details where the relativism comes into play. I don't think the "universal" attributes of language are nearly as "universal" as most of us would like to believe. A word in a language is an index to an area of our experiences, and we have no way of accessing other people's experiences to determine that a given word has the same boundaries. We have quite good evidence to the contrary, actually. I am not a big fan of closed in spaces. I have friends who are spulunkers. I have a very different reaction to certain descriptions than they do. This is not just some emotional thing that can be waved off. This is part of the fundamentally different definition given to the same word. Consider arguing with a theist. His definition of truth is *nothing* like yours or mine. Ignore the question of who's definition is correct, consider how are you going to communicate with him at all if you cannot negotiate a definition for what "truth" is? [qoute] It is because of the mystery that we still don't understand exactly how humans categorizes knowledge is why you might consider it related to mysticism, platonims, etc.The rest of your statement here then fall flat because empiricism and metaphysical naturalism must first be based on an epistomological foundation for them to have any usefulness or meaning at all. [/quote] Empiricism *is* an epistomological foundation. Objectivism is a *ontological* foundation. I reject the need for ontology. I'm not making an argument for ignorance. My position would not be affected if we figured out exactly how the brain works tomorrow, mostly because my position has been heavily influenced by my toy projects in artificial intelligences, specifically knowledge representation and natural language processing. Both of which have shown me repeatedly that when you do have access to the structures that underlie the language, they are rarely the same even when the surface is. Quote:
I agree with your evaluation here. To me, the essence of objectivism is that requirement to believe that there is something casting the shadows. If you merely want to build up a correlation of shape and probabilistic prediction of what the shadows will do based upon past experience, you never have to leave the realm of epistemology. You make some assumptions about causality and continuity, add a few trust networks, apply a skeptical edge, and suddenly you have science. If you want to insist that the things that cast the shadows are "material" or "natural", then that's fine, though largely superflous to building a predictive knowledge base. Quote:
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Who gets to decide what A is or is not? How can we tell that A[99percent]=A[nialscorva]? |
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01-22-2003, 12:43 PM | #105 | ||
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Do you use a priori truths? How do you know they have any bearing on the outside world, then? How do you check them? With the shadows of perception? Again you have the problem of not being able to find out what is beyond them. IMO, the solution is a relativistic one. There is now foundation, or rather the foundation is not needed to build knowledge about your perceptions. You assume that your perceptions are valid, and run with it as far as you can go. However, you should never forget that they are your perceptions. Quote:
If you are alone on an island, how do you determine if you are sane or insane? If there is an objective standard for knowledge, this should be easy. A relativist would gladly admit that you can only know by the reflection of yourself in other people, and you cannot determine this for yourself with any certainty. |
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01-22-2003, 01:42 PM | #106 | |
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01-22-2003, 06:01 PM | #107 | |||
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Speechless
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Of course, this description uses langauge but I am asking you to imagine the scenario from the first person perspective of the participants. Also, I should mention that I consider the proposition as represented by/communicated by language. Writing and spoken words contain information symbols intersubjectively understood by transmitter and receiver. Going back to the original quote from Habermas, there is an implication that the sentence is the proposition and I don't agree with this. Finally, I'm not sure how we can "confront our sentences". I have precognition that there may be a lot of shots fired at my response and I'm interested to see what objections arise. Cheers, John |
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01-22-2003, 06:01 PM | #108 |
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Two reasons not to like it...
Greetings:
The allegory of the cave is also an advertisement for mysticism folks... Keith. |
01-22-2003, 06:14 PM | #109 | |
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Touchdown!
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This is one reason why, IMHO, one must consider ontology and epistemology side by side. See quote from Pooh below illustrating why. Earlier you rejected the need for an ontology. Explanation welcome. Cheers, John __________________________________________________ "And Pooh .... thought how wonderful it would be to have a Real Brain which could tell you things." A.A. Milne __________________________________________________ |
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01-22-2003, 06:40 PM | #110 | |
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Re: Touchdown!
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