G
grannymh
Guest
Sorry to be so cranky. I do need my morning Pepsi.I don’t think someone wants to kill me. We were using the phrase as an example. :coffeeread:
This is the example which can stand independently.
From post 74 “I am of the opinion that someone wants to kill me” = “I think someone wants to kill me”.
This is a fact claim. Just like any other fact claim, it could be wrong.![]()
My question regarding important whats and/or whys of the example is similar to the question I posed in Post 75. “Shouldn’t someone, pro or con, be able to tell me what a “morality” is and what a “moral” is?”It would be quite a different thing to say that I *feel *like someone wants to kill me. This would not be a fact claim, of course.
Obvioulsy, I have no patience with ivory tower discussions regarding how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. In my humble opinion, leaving out the what and why results in a non-practical example similar to counting athletic angels and discounting uncoordinated angles.
Please don’t misunderstand me. I am not referring to all the wonderful discussions about how the mind and brain work together, etc. etc. and how thoughts are formed and concepts processed and images retained, etc., etc
What I am referring to are the skills needed to refute relativism which is more damaging than mere subjectivism. This may be shocking, but subjective reasoning can seek truth just as objective reasoning can seek truth. The operative words are can seek. Speaking as an outsider, in my humble opinion, a glaring problem in some discussions is the inability to discern the use of the arguments known as either/or and both/and. Also missing are some old analytical skills which were used in the days when a taxi was called to deliver a “breaking news story” to the media.
I really do need to get my morning Pepsi.