Ah ha! So let’s talk about that hypothesis of strong empiricism. What is it, if you can say? I’m asking because here you are acknowledging that a strong variety of empiricism can be asserted as a hypothesis.
I asserted that naive empiricism as the title of the argument uses the term is understood to refer to strong empiricism. Which is the proposition you are asserting. As I have had to repeatedly point out the words “hypothesis” and “theory” are synonyms. Using one or the other makes no change in meaning.
Also, as you are able to distinguish between this hypothesis and weak empiricism, can you say what the argument for weak empiricism is?
Do your own work.
It would only be fair if you knew exactly what I’m thinking:
No clue what this means.
Naive hypothesis - experience evidences the hypothesis that knowledge requires experience.
First those are the wrong terms, second, it does not evidence anything as I have repeatedly demonstrated.
Weak - some knowledge requires experience.
Something like that. It can be stated many different ways.
We can see plainly that I am not using weak to argue for naive/strong as they are actually different.
No we can’t. You used the wrong terms. Naive empricism is not the same thing as a naive hypothesis.
Also, we can see that naive empiricism is not a dogma
Strong empiricism, which is what naive empiricism is a reference to, as yo have assertes it is clearly a dogma. Not that it matters because regardless of adjective, it is still a proposition that creates a well known logical contradiction.
- and you’ve just said that it is ‘a long disproven hypothesis’.
Which means the exact same thing when we call it a “theory”. Changing synonyms doesn’t change anything.
I’m asking you because this revelation in my opinion ends the discussion on whether it is a dogma to assert hypothetically that knowledge requires experience.
What revelation? the words theory and hypothesis are still synonymous. Further, you cannot assert that black is white, or that a dog is a cat, until evidence proves otherwise. The contradiction shows the statement is false as soon as it is uttered.
Yes I am aware that the author is redefining an existing sort of empiricism.
He is not. Naive empiricism simply refers to strong empiricism. He tries to use the weak empirical argument to support it.
The contentious part seems to be his formulation which says the fundamental principle of empiricism can be a hypothesis.
No, that is what you find contentious. I don’t care what you call it because it is still a proposition that is a well known logical contradiction. You think calling it a hypothesis instead of a theory changes the meaning, no matter how many times I point out they are synonymous. Further you misuse the term hypothesis as though it entails the word empirical and so on, which you never seem to understand is assuming your case before you make it. Circular reasoning, not that there is anything wrong with that. Worse, you have no evidence, you cannot prove that you are experiencing physical senses at all, etc. You are missing the forest for the trees as they say.