Betterave,
I am having problems following your overall point here. You are claiming, I take it, that the boundary between imaginary and non-imaginary things is difficult to distinguish in some cases?
That’s undeniably true, despite your claim below.
Or are you claiming that we don’t have a clear basis for distinguishing between imaginary and non-imaginary things?
That’s surely true in particular cases, but that’s not my point. My point is about
what that general basis is which we have for distinguishing, namely, rational dialogue. Scientific method qualifies as a form of rational dialogue, but obviously is not the
only form of rational dialogue, or the most
fundamental form.
After all, you write: Originally Posted by Betterave
there are other questions you can ask [people] which will lead them to realize that that dichotomy [between imaginary and non-imaginary] isn’t always as unproblematic as it first seems. It sounds like you think that it can be difficult to distinguish between imaginary things and non-imaginary things.
But it really isn’t. We have good reasons, for example, to lock some people up in mental hospitals when they start hearing angels telling them to dance naked in the streets to prevent an alien invasion from beyond the stars.
But it really is (sometimes)! The fact that you can cite cases where it is not is completely irrelevant to that claim. Can’t you see that? It’s like saying “all cats are black - you want proof? - look there’s a black cat right there.”
In addition, your dichotomy between imaginary and non-imaginary is not only difficult to know how to apply sometimes, it is also far to simplistic as a universal sorter or differentiator of claims with regard to their epistemic status. Can you see that? It’s also not clear what it’s role is even supposed to be in terms of an epistemic concept, for the obvious reasons which I’ve already pointed out repeatedly. The general goal of scientific inquiry cannot be accurately expressed as “to distinguish between what is imaginary and what is non-imaginary.” Right?
I want to take a moment to contrast our writing styles:
When I write my posts, I do so in the clearest possible terms. I present my ideas as claims, and I clearly mark them as such, and I give very specific and concrete examples to clarify what I’m talking about. My goal is communication.
That’s nice, but your examples don’t show much - except the fact that you’re prone to reasoning in
non sequiturs. For example, see your example above - that
should be clear enough.
When you write posts, you do so in riddles. You make cryptic comments like, “that dichotomy [between imaginary and non-imaginary] isn’t always as unproblematic as it first seems,” yet you never bother to explain what you mean. You need to actually say, in straightforward English, what’s “problematic” about it in your opinion. It would also help to give specific, concrete examples to clarify whatever it is that you’re on about.
But that’s what the last, I don’t know, fifty posts have been about: explaining that “the dichotomy [between imaginary and non-imaginary] isn’t always as unproblematic as it first seems.” If you have a problem with this claim, just say so and say what it is. Why do you act as if that’s an unreasonable expectation?
I’ve said that my goal is communication; yours appears to be obfuscation.
That’s not true, and rather silly. If you don’t understand me, it doesn’t follow that my goal is obfuscation. And with groundless red herring accusations like this, it seems that
I could be justified in making this same claim about
you. (I prefer to stay on topic, however.)
I am forced to assume that the only reason you do not state your own claims as clearly as I do is that you do not have fully-formed opinions of your own on these subjects.
The other possibility here is that your premise is false: in fact I do state my claims as clearly as you do, but you mistakenly attribute your failure to understand my claims as evidence that I am not being clear. In any case, the appropriate response when you fail to understand something is not to resort to an
ad hominem, as you have done here; the appropriate response is to ask for clarification, to explain what it is you don’t understand and why.
For example, write a sentence that begins, “I disagree with your claim that evidence-basd inquiry is the only consistently reliable method we have of learning things about the non-imaginary world because…” Finish it with a reason that supports your disagreement. Follow this reason with a specific example of what you’re talking about.
It’s really not that hard.
Apparently it is that hard, because I’ve done what you ask for here, but you apparently didn’t notice.
In any case, I’d appreciate it if you tried to stay on topic.