B
Betterave
Guest
Hi TS,
Sorry for the delay getting back to you, I had a hectic couple of weeks.
I think my use of ‘demonstrate’ is far from novel! It fits very well with the definitions you list. What novel definitions do you take me to have offered?
Sorry for the delay getting back to you, I had a hectic couple of weeks.
Of course not (although, an obvious word of caution, the extensions of terms here are subject to debate).I think it’s pretty basic. How do you “demonstrate” something objectively? Do you have some method that is not bound to the examination of evidence, analysis of experiment and results, gauging of predictions?
You’re enamored of “alternative science” (your unnamed* Wissenschaften, below)*, so here’s a good place to layout how the science you advocate “demonstrates” some proposition. Failing some competing approach, I think we default to the common rendering of the word:
Alternative science? That’s a strange term for you to interject. What is it supposed to mean?I can work with novel definitions, but I need some referents and clear semantics if I’m going to use them. What does “demonstrate” mean in your world, in your science?
I think my use of ‘demonstrate’ is far from novel! It fits very well with the definitions you list. What novel definitions do you take me to have offered?
Are you serious? You can’t see how the claim you mentioned can be presented in more and less dogmatic ways??? You can’t expect me to take this seriously, surely? Anyway, you’re also chasing a bit of a straw man here. Presentation changes dogmatic character, not necessarily underlying dogma. (This isn’t my wordsmithing by the way - it’s common usage!) As for the bit about “impervious to critique or evaluation”, again, are you serious? Surely you bin hangin round enough to know that ain’t so!!! What’s this thread about? Doesn’t it seek to develop a critique of this claim, at least indirectly?It is? If I take a de fide bit of dogma from the Catholic Church, like this:
“God was moved by His Goodness to create the world.”
How does it’s presentation change the underlying dogma, the unassailable, revealed claim? However you want to wordsmith it, or present it, it’s fundamentally a fideist proposition, impervious to critique or evaluation.
Actually, I think you’re confusing saying one thing with saying another. Saying “reality is real” is **not **to say “extramental reality is not contingent on my conceptualization of it.” Why would you think those two very different statements amount to the same thing?You are confusing the map and the territory here. The concept of “real” – our definition, is NOT reality itself. This distinction breaks out of the tautology (all concepts are defined and related in terms of other concepts… explanations are inherently tautological as descriptions). When I say “reality is real”, the referent of my concept of reality are the extramental objects that I perceive. I think about what those stimuli mean and what kind of thoughts and reacts might follow from that, considering them to be conceptually real, but reality obtains no matter what I think, or what my concepts are like in my brain. Saying “reality is real” is to say that extramental reality is not contingent on my conceptualization of it.