R
R_Daneel
Guest
Well, since we are simply having a conversation, this is quite all right. I am not a professional philosopher either, though I had classes in college. (And that was a very long time ago.)That’s a big question, and one that I, as an undergrad freshman philosophy major, do not feel qualified to answer definitively. Nevertheless, I will offer the following observations.
Yes. (But I must add, that this view is imprecise. Most people are not rational, they are habit and instinct driven. But for our our purposes, we shall disregard this feature.) Indeed the cogito ergo sum is the best way to start. Maybe we can (together) start to extrapolate from it. Sounds fun, but can be time consuming.I think Descartes was on to something fundamental in his cogito ergo sum. This was part of his thought experiment in radical doubt- while he could doubt everything else, he could not bring himself to doubt his own doubting. This brings us back to one of the points I argued- that we are rational beings before we are scientific, theological, or other kind of beings in the particular.
I agree with this, too. But I must point out that this approach presupposes the method of verification (which is part of the strictly rational, scientific method.) I suspect that there is no other way. The other possibility of “pure faith” (not in the theological sense!) which is simply wishful thinking can be discarded as irrelevant, precisely since it lacks the feedback control (verification).While we cannot know something as simply true, we can know things as reasonably true based on massive threads that all converge on and support that proposition.
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