Epistemology 101

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I am not sure if it was on this thread or another, however it has already been clearly explained to you why this sort of reductionist approach fails. It is one this to argue one’s point, it is another to continue to argue from a position that has been clearly debunked.
self awareness isnt compatible with either a deterministic or non-determinitic universe, any more than free will is.

if the universe is deterministic, then your ‘self awareness’ is a predesigned, unalterable condition necessarily accounted for in every previous state of the universe, pointing to design, and if its an indeterministic universe, then the coherency of everyones self awareness is a completely random event. thats just not a believable scenario.
 
I am confused by your including the knowledge of the supernatural as it’s own category.
Maybe my intention was not clear. By all means, use any or all of the episteological methods you want to. The point is that if the knowledge can be gained about the supernatural by using the same tools that we use for the other parts of existence, then it is well and good. I don’t think this is the case. But, so far, not one post was directed to the problem presented in the OP. And we are already on the fifth page.
 
I have admitted that it is a definition, but it is also true or false. Either a circle is “the collection of all points, which are at the same distance from the center of the circle” or it is not.
How can a definition be “true” or “false”. In what regard?
 
But, so far, not one post was directed to the problem presented in the OP. And we are already on the fifth page.
then answer this question, otherwise the OP is meaningless because you either cannot, or will not support the assertions included within it.

**
are you suggesting that there is only the natural and everything else is a concept or an abstraction? if so, then what would be the basis for such an assertion? **
 
then answer this question, otherwise the OP is meaningless because you either cannot, or will not support the assertions included within it.

**
are you suggesting that there is only the natural and everything else is a concept or an abstraction? if so, then what would be the basis for such an assertion? **
You have definitely demonstrated your intellect when you said: “a sentence does not have to be self-referential to itself to be self-refuting”. I have nothing else to say.
 
How can a definition be “true” or “false”. In what regard?
Is this novel to you?

Either a definition is what it says something is and is a true definition or if the definition does not properly define, it is a false definition.

Either a circle is exactly what the postulate/definition says it is, and is a true definition or a circle is considered something different and thereby the definition is incorrect and false.
 
Maybe my intention was not clear. By all means, use any or all of the episteological methods you want to. The point is that if the knowledge can be gained about the supernatural by using the same tools that we use for the other parts of existence, then it is well and good. I don’t think this is the case. But, so far, not one post was directed to the problem presented in the OP. And we are already on the fifth page.
Can you clearly define what you mean by “supernatural”?
 
self awareness isnt compatible with either a deterministic or non-determinitic universe, any more than free will is.

if the universe is deterministic, then your ‘self awareness’ is a predesigned, unalterable condition necessarily accounted for in every previous state of the universe, pointing to design, and if its an indeterministic universe, then the coherency of everyones self awareness is a completely random event. thats just not a believable scenario.
Or option 3 open a science book and read. You will then learn that development of self awareness is anything but a completely random event.

Lets say i have a random number generator. It continually generates numbers between one and ten. Every time it generates a five i save that five to my set of numbers. I stop once i have 100 numbers, all of which are five. Tell me, is it random luck that i have 100 fives?
 
Or option 3 open a science book and read. You will then learn that development of self awareness is anything but a completely random event.
What would a science book be able to tell me about the immaterial?
Lets say i have a random number generator. It continually generates numbers between one and ten. Every time it generates a five i save that five to my set of numbers. I stop once i have 100 numbers, all of which are five. Tell me, is it random luck that i have 100 fives?
100%, you have 100 5s in 100 trys. What was the likelyhood that this happened by chance? If the generator was simulating a uniform distribution of whole numbers, the probabity that it was a chance occurance is 0.1 raised to the power of 100, a really small number.
 
Is this novel to you?
You bet it is! Never even heard anything like that.
Either a definition is what it says something is and is a true definition or if the definition does not properly define, it is a false definition.

Either a circle is exactly what the postulate/definition says it is, and is a true definition or a circle is considered something different and thereby the definition is incorrect and false.
And, pray tell, just how are you going to compare the “defined” circle with this other “THE circle”? There is no “THE” circle. Do you think about the Platonian “ideal” objects? That every concrete object is just an imperfect actulaization of some ideal forms? I hope not.

Now you can ask if a definition is sensible, or not. For example: If the definition of omnipotence is “the ability to do anything and everything” - that is a **valid **definition, but it is not a **sound **definition. It is not a sensible definition, because it is self-contradictory.
 
Can you clearly define what you mean by “supernatural”?
Yes. Non-physical, yet active existence.

Anything and everything that are not part of the physical universe, and which are not part of our abstractions about the physical universe, which are not concepts. Examples: gods, angels, demons, poltergeists, etc. These entities exist as as concepts, of course. These entities are assumed to be active, being able to exert influence on our physical existence, despite the fact that they are non-physical.
 
I have nothing else to say.
of course not, because you are dodging admitting that you are attempting to employ an empirical principle, without actually using the word empirical, because although you deny the empirical claim is self refuting, you know full well it is, or else you would simply answer this question.

if you want to use weak empiricism or verification, then you will need to defend them

**are you suggesting that there is only the natural and everything else is a concept or an abstraction? if so, then what would be the basis for such an assertion? **
You have definitely demonstrated your intellect when you said: “a sentence does not have to be self-referential to itself to be self-refuting”.
and it doesnt in the way you implied at the time, which i took to be the ‘liars statement’.

you meant “its a member of the set of all propositions” then when i pointed out that a sentece doesnt need to refer to itself, then you changed up to ‘indirectly refered to itself’

instead you just kept calling them ‘correct’ and ‘incorrect’ based on the operator, when they are actually the strong and weak version. because you didnt know what was going on. which was completely confusing the issue.

yes, that statement was wrong, if you always meant ‘indirectly’, that simply wasnt how i took it at the time. see me admitting a mistake? thats how you do it.🙂
 
Or option 3 open a science book and read. You will then learn that development of self awareness is anything but a completely random event.
im not talking about its developement but its operation in the 2 possible states of the universe.
 
I Am not a scientist, but I can attempt to illustrate.
Hypothetical
A person makes a claim to have seen someone in their house, at various times and in various locations throughout their house. The alleged visitor is described as wearing clothing typical of the time period 150 years prior to the current year. An investigator is called in, to figure out what, if any, event is transpiring. Assume that tmanpower, time, and money are not limited in this scenario, for purposes of discussion of methods. This hypothetical event takes place in 2009.

Here are standard steps which might be taken, with no specific hypothesis given at the start. ( inductive reasoning.
  1. a polygraph is taken to indicate whether it is likely a lie.
  • If The test indicates a strong likelihood of no conscious lying then…
  1. The claimant is given an exhaustive battery of physical, medical, and psychological tests, to check for the presence of anything that might cause delusion or hallucination
  • If nothing is found to indicate these possibilities, then…
  1. The physical enviroment is checked for, and secured against, any human or natural explanation of the sightings, including, but not limited to, props, actors, electronic or mechanical devices, or third party intrusions. Once this is done, the person is asked to again verify if the sighting occurs again. If the sightings are reported again then…
  2. There is a likely possibility that the sighting may be genuine, and paranormal, since all ‘natural’ causes would have been exhausted.
    Anything beyond this would be not considered within in the purview of current standard science.
    It might consist of some or all of the following:
    a) a pychic investigator
    b) devices to capture energy or other evidence ( evps, photos, videos, heat, movement, and electrical sensors, etc…)
    c) a research into the background of the property, and past and present inhabitants, and events, to establish a connection or cause.
Any results would either ‘disprove’ or ‘corroborate’ the claim of sightings. While such evidence may be considered ’ circumstantial ’ or 'anecdotal ’ it would be the only available information, and thus would be the only possible way of determining the inductive hypothesis that, barring any other explanation in the future, the sighting is genuine and paranormal in nature.
 
yes, that statement was wrong, if you always meant ‘indirectly’, that simply wasnt how i took it at the time. see me admitting a mistake? thats how you do it.🙂
Ok. Maybe we shall get somewhere. Obviously “self-referential” could mean both directly or indirectly referencing itself. And, of course, I made it very clear that this is what I mean. But, whatever.

Now, to your question: **are you suggesting that there is only the natural and everything else is a concept or an abstraction? if so, then what would be the basis for such an assertion? **

Yes, that is what I am suggesting. For the sake of clarity: “this is merely a suggestion, not an absolute statement”. I do not say that I deny outright, that these are the only two types of existence. Clear enough for you?

Since you asked why, these are several reasons for it. Number one: “it is not clear just what this alleged third kind of existence means?”. Until this question is answered in a clear, precise manner there is no way to get any further.

A long, long time ago, I already started at least one (maybe more) threads about this subject (under a different pen name). I suggested a terminology of “P-existence” for physical existence, “C-existence” for conceptual existence and “X-existence” for the rest.

P-existence is “simple”. We all know what is meant by that. P-existence is active.
C-existence is not that simple. It can involve concept about P-existence (physical sciences), concepts about C-existence itself (philosophy) and concepts about totally imaginary objects, like fairies, leprechauns, all sorts of fairy tales. It also contains concepts about this assumed, third type of existence “X-existence”. C-existence is inactive. Concepts cannot directly influence P-existing objects.

Now, here comes the first problem. The concepts about this third type of existence are not clearly defined. Different people define it differently. Catholics and Protestants have somewhat similar, but not identical concepts of it. Muslims, Hindus, Mormons, Zoroastians, etc. have also very different ideas about it. And these concepts are not just “somewhat different”, in some minor, inconsequential details, they are different on major levels, they outright contradict each other. Also, X-existence is supposed to be active. It can directly influence the P-existence. The “how” can it do that, is undefined. It is simply assumed.

In one word: X-existence is undefined. Why should anyone be bothered with accepting a concept, which is undefined?

Now, of course, all those who believe that X-existence is “real” (and what does “real” mean here is also undefined) will vigorously assert that their concept is right, and all the other ones are wrong. Hardly a promising start.

When they are asked on what ground do they assert that their concept is the correct one, there are several answers.
  1. There is usually a reference to some “holy book”. In every instance this “holy book” is an old text, written by ignorant, superstitious people, who had absolutely no idea about nature. For them it was a huge “mystery”. They told stories about some “creator”. These books are loaded with nonsensical assertions. Magic is abound in them. For a long time, this was enough. People believed what they were told, and were threatened with all sorts of repercussions (in this life and in the afterlife) if they dared to dissent.
  2. Then there are some, so-called “proofs”, usually some line of argument, which is supposed to lead to the existence of a “supernatural”. The problem with these “proofs” (which really should be called arguments!) is multi-fold. Either they start with a poorly defined, nonsensical concept, like the “greatest conceivable being” and go straight downhill from there. Or they presume some natural phenomenon, and assert that this phenomenon cannot be “explained” unless one posits an external cause. The problems with this are also multi-fold, but they rest with the specific assumptions (first cause, sustaining cause, etc.) There is one problem which permeates all of them: “the logical fallacy of composition”. They all point to some natural phenomenon or attribute, and assert that it is also applicable to the universe itself. They don’t attempt to prove this, it is simply assumed. Then there are some ontological arguments. They introduce all sorts of strange concepts (necessary and contingent existence) which are pretty much meaningless, and when filled with some meaning, they lead nowhere.
  3. Then there are the ramifications of the “X-existence”. These come from specific attribute assigned to the “X-existing” being (or beings). These attributes are always exeggarated to the extreme, which pretty much robs them of any sensible meaning. Also the logical results of these attributes are notoriously missing from P-existence. To account for that, all sorts of rationalizations are used.
So, the consolidated reason for my suggestion is simple. The definition of “X-existence” is undefined. When some definition is suggested, it leads nowhere (best case) or leads to direct contradiction to what we do know from our own experience. The worst part is the shameless rationalization the believers of “X-existence” will put up as “arguments” for their beliefs.

This is the basis for my suggestion. Now, this is quite a chunk. But you asked, and I answered. Was it just another waste of time? Who knows?
 
You bet it is! Never even heard anything like that.

And, pray tell, just how are you going to compare the “defined” circle with this other “THE circle”? There is no “THE” circle. Do you think about the Platonian “ideal” objects? That every concrete object is just an imperfect actulaization of some ideal forms? I hope not.
Well, to be honest, I wasn’t even thinking about Plato. But I would hope it were obvious to you that a thing’s existence is separate from its definition. That is to say, in order for you to define something, it must exist first. Otherwise, the definition is not objective and is entirely subjective. Then, universal skepticism might very well be legitimate.
Now you can ask if a definition is sensible, or not. For example: If the definition of omnipotence is “the ability to do anything and everything” - that is a **valid **definition, but it is not a **sound **definition. It is not a sensible definition, because it is self-contradictory.
If something is valid, then it is true. The determination of the soundness of something might very well be subjective. But, we hold the validness of something to not be. If a definition is valid, then it truly describes what it is meant to described. If I said that a circle is not a set of points equidistant from a given center, then that would be an incorrect, false and invalid definition because it is not true the nature of a circle, which is thought to be an objective reality.

Since you are a mathematician, you must assume that the nature of a circle is an objective reality. It is a necessary postulate of mathematics. And if it is an objective reality, then there must be definitions that both accurately (truly) and inaccurately (falsely) describe this reality. If you maintain that there is no such thing as true and false definitions, then you are claiming that the things that are defined by definitions are entirely subjective. That would not be a good position for you to hold.
 
Funnily enough, none of research hypothesizes the reality of persons, truth, goodness, freedom, justice, beauty or love - which you are obviously prepared to discard in favour of purposeless particles… Your blind faith in science won’t do you any good when it comes to solving your personal problems…
You are the one who has espoused reductionism! I believe in the** reality **of persons, truth, goodness, freedom, justice, beauty or love whereas you don’t. Instead of referring to an obscure explanation it would be more to the point to explain it yourself.
It is one thing to argue one’s point, it is another to continue to argue from a position that has been clearly debunked.
How do I know it has been debunked? If it had it would be headline news considering that this position is shared by the vast majority of people in the world… Produce your evidence.
 
A person’s testimony about something is not on the same level as testimony plus corroborating physical evidence.
Helena, our testimony about what we are thinking does not need corroborating because we have direct knowledge of our thoughts. No physical investigation can ascertain what our thoughts are.
Some human testimony is better than others though-someone with a track record of lying or a history of mental illness makes a bad witness. Someone relying on a sketchy or biased reading of physical evidence makes a bad scientist.
I agree but if people say they are thinking we have no reason to believe they are lying. They can hardly be deluded in that respect!
My point was, theists and atheists use the same sorts of evidence to arrive at their conclusions, just to differing degrees. So I didn’t buy the OP suggestion that theists have or need a fourth method to arrive at a conclusion.
Again I agree but the OP excluded introspection even though it is the source of all knowledge! My main point is that since** all our knowledge **is based on inference except knowledge of ourselves there is no reason whatsoever to believe physical objects have a privileged existential status. It is the exact reverse…
 
Addressing your OP, your going to have to give me a good reason why I should accept your series of claims, other than claims of descending into universal skepticism, which I have already addressed.

I am waiting for you to finally confess the obvious: that the ideas and axioms on which your belief system rest have no basis accept intuitively.
 
Now, to your question: **are you suggesting that there is only the natural and everything else is a concept or an abstraction? if so, then what would be the basis for such an assertion? **

Yes, that is what I am suggesting. For the sake of clarity: “this is merely a suggestion, not an absolute statement”. I do not say that I deny outright, that these are the only two types of existence. Clear enough for you?

Since you asked why, these are several reasons for it. Number one: “it is not clear just what this alleged third kind of existence means?”. Until this question is answered in a clear, precise manner there is no way to get any further.

A long, long time ago, I already started at least one (maybe more) threads about this subject (under a different pen name). I suggested a terminology of “P-existence” for physical existence, “C-existence” for conceptual existence and “X-existence” for the rest.

P-existence is “simple”. We all know what is meant by that. P-existence is active.
C-existence is not that simple. It can involve concept about P-existence (physical sciences), concepts about C-existence itself (philosophy) and concepts about totally imaginary objects, like fairies, leprechauns, all sorts of fairy tales. It also contains concepts about this assumed, third type of existence “X-existence”. C-existence is inactive. Concepts cannot directly influence P-existing objects.

Now, here comes the first problem. The concepts about this third type of existence are not clearly defined…

In one word: X-existence is undefined. Why should anyone be bothered with accepting a concept, which is undefined?

Now, of course, all those who believe that X-existence is “real” (and what does “real” mean here is also undefined) will vigorously assert that their concept is right, and all the other ones are wrong. Hardly a promising start.

When they are asked on what ground do they assert that their concept is the correct one, there are several answers.
various religions have their own cosmologies, none having anything to do with the ontology of existence.

most are simply talking about their own particular religious narrative.

however, i cant answer for other faiths ideas, i can only show the metaphyical foundations of mine.
  1. There is usually a reference to some “holy book”…
there is no such thing as magic. but that said, most of them have no bearing on metaphysics.
  1. Then there are some, so-called “proofs”, usually some line of argument, which is supposed to lead to the existence of a “supernatural”. The problem with these “proofs” (which really should be called arguments!) is multi-fold. Either they start with a poorly defined, nonsensical concept, like the “greatest conceivable being” and go straight downhill from there. Or they presume some natural phenomenon, and assert that this phenomenon cannot be “explained” unless one posits an external cause. The problems with this are also multi-fold, but they rest with the specific assumptions (first cause, sustaining cause, etc.) There is one problem which permeates all of them: “the logical fallacy of composition”. They all point to some natural phenomenon or attribute, and assert that it is also applicable to the universe itself. They don’t attempt to prove this, it is simply assumed. Then there are some ontological arguments. They introduce all sorts of strange concepts (necessary and contingent existence) which are pretty much meaningless, and when filled with some meaning, they lead nowhere.
this is part of metaphysics, and though some arguments are stronger than others, ill be happy to talk about their specifics. though this is a huge topic. we might want to tackle one at a time.
  1. Then there are the ramifications of the “X-existence”. These come from specific attribute assigned to the “X-existing” being (or beings). These attributes are always exeggarated to the extreme, which pretty much robs them of any sensible meaning. Also the logical results of these attributes are notoriously missing from P-existence. To account for that, all sorts of rationalizations are used.
as to an extreme exageration you might be refering to the omnimaxs and how we derive them.

as to the idea that no effect is seen in what you call P-existence, i would point to free will, self awareness, etc
So, the consolidated reason for my suggestion is simple. The definition of “X-existence” is undefined. When some definition is suggested, it leads nowhere (best case) or leads to direct contradiction to what we do know from our own experience. The worst part is the shameless rationalization the believers of “X-existence” will put up as “arguments” for their beliefs.
This is the basis for my suggestion. Now, this is quite a chunk. But you asked, and I answered. Was it just another waste of time? Who knows?
i wonder why you would separate existence into these categories without first making some assumption of an empirical statement. simply saying ‘P-existence’ indicates that you feel this is a separate category for some reason from other things that exist. if you are not making an empirical statement, then why make the distinction?

we divide reality by contingency, necessity, actuality, potentiality, et, al. most of these apply to any being without the need to make distinctions.

though youve cover,d a huge field here, it should be narrowed for the sake of post length and the simplicity of sticking to one topic ata time.
 
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