W
warpspeedpetey
Guest
You said…There is no contradiction. It does not even “seem” to contradict it. A claim pertaining to external reality should not be confused with a claim about a claim pertaining to external reality. Don’t you understand the difference between a claim and a meta-claim? I guess you do not.
This “contradiction” only appears in your delusions. I will explain it once, and only once.
No one says that only those claims should be accepted that can be verified empirically. If someone would make that claim, then he would commit a logical fallacy, since that claim cannot be verified empirically. But since no one says that, your “contradiction” is nothing but a huge red herring.
Then you saidDo you understand this simple, logical line of thought?
In a very good sense it is flawed. Because every claim needs the same kind of evidence - actual, real evidence. It is not necessary to subdivide claims into ordinary and extraordinary claims. We need to use the same criteria for all claims - real evidence.
Depending on the type of the claim, the evidence required is different.
It is clear you are contradicting yourself.
- Claims within an axiomatic system require a formal proof, resting on the axioms.
- Claims about the external reality require actual, real, verifyable evidence. (Something that poor wsp is unable to comprehend.)