Women's rolls in socity

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From dictionary.com- Exception: 2)something excepted; an instance or case not conforming to the general rule.
So, better look at your rule then.
Question: If there is no general rule, how do you know what your discussing is an exception? An exception to what?
An exception to your belief structure on the subject. Better examine it.
Again from dictionary.com- Refutation: an act of refuting a statement, charge, etc.; disproof.
To disprove something is to make it null and void, or take it out of existence.
Right.
 
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Kaninchen:
It’s a perfectly (purrfectly) good example in logic and phrases like ‘essential to a cat’s nature’ tell you nothing about the ‘nature’ of cats - that you discover by conjecturing ideas about cat physiology or behavior and testing them out. A failure in such a test will tell you that your conjecture has failed and you need to find a better one - a test success won’t tell you your conjecture is right, by the way, but that’s another issue.

Evolution in one branch of mammals.

I’m sorry but that is all wrong. What is essential to ones nature is what is common to all things in that Genus. In other words, what makes a triangle a triangle is the fact that it has three sides and three corners. Not that we have a blue triangle or a red triangle. The color is not essential, and the same goes for cats. My question still stands, what makes a cat a cat? As opposed to another type of mammal like a dog.

A lesson in logic: philosophypages.com/lg/index.htm

Look up definition and meaning, especially intension. That is what I’m basically asking you about the cat.
 
I’m sorry but that is all wrong.
Damn, after all those years of epistemology and scientific method courses at college as well.
What is essential to ones nature is what is common to all things in that Genus.
How do we ascertain, with what analytical tools do we ascertain, what is ‘common’?
In other words, what makes a triangle a triangle is the fact that it has three sides and three corners.
‘Triangle’ is a ‘sign’ (word) we use to denote a three-sided figure on a plane surface. The ‘sign’ is not identical to the ‘signified’, it is merely a word. The concept of ‘triangle’ exists within a more general framework of conceptualization of figures. It is a logical framework and not part of the purview of ‘scientific method’.
Not that we have a blue triangle or a red triangle. The color is not essential, and the same goes for cats.
For the purposes of the exercise, I could just have easily have chosen aspects of physiology or behavior like ‘has a tail’ or ‘catches mice’ - it would have, at least, prevented your ad-hockery in avoiding facing up to the problem of refutation!
My question still stands, what makes a cat a cat? As opposed to another type of mammal like a dog.
My answer still stands, ‘evolution’.

There are numerous problems with the concept of ‘essence’ - something that dropped out of scientific thought centuries ago partly because it sent scientific endeavor to sleep for a couple of millennia - not least of which is the problem of refutation as we have seen in your ‘interesting’ attempts at defending your position - where the ‘exception’ somehow became the ‘rule’ (redolent of the 'phlogiston has negative weight solution)!

What we can know about the creatures that we have placed in a taxonomy and called ‘cats’ does not come from distilling from observation some ‘essence’ that, somehow, exists within them all but from thinking, guessing and testing about their physiology and behavior, learning from our mistakes (the ‘refutations’), thinking some more and doing more guessing and testing. That way, we learn more and more about the complexities of the creatures.

Enough of the colors, get on with the problem of ‘rules’ and their ‘exceptions’ and how to deal with them.
 
Damn, after all those years of epistemology and scientific method courses at college as well.

I don’t know if Socrates ever went to college, and yet was one of the wisest people who ever lived. By the way, did you even read the link I put up. Are you calling that logic wrong? If so, on what bases?

How do we ascertain, with what analytical tools do we ascertain, what is ‘common’?

How about with a little common sense, with what we observe and all people agree to be true.

My answer still stands, ‘evolution’.

There are numerous problems with the concept of ‘essence’ - something that dropped out of scientific thought centuries ago partly because it sent scientific endeavor to sleep for a couple of millennia -

Science was born out of Philosophy. The scientific method has it’s place but cannot answer all of life’s questions. Just because some bad philosophies came out of the “enlightenment” doesn’t mean that questions such as essence have been refuted. Just ignored. If you beleive we all evolved from a single cell organism, then evolution is a bad answer to my question. It becomes too ambiguous and doesn’t make a distinction between a cat, a dog, a giraffe, etc…since we all evolved from the same “stuff”.

What we can know about the creatures that we have placed in a taxonomy and called ‘cats’ does not come from distilling from observation some ‘essence’ that, somehow, exists within them all but from thinking, guessing and testing about their physiology and behavior, learning from our mistakes (the ‘refutations’), thinking some more and doing more guessing and testing. That way, we learn more and more about the complexities of the creatures.

So prior to the scientific method, people could not properly distinguish one thing from another?

Enough of the colors, get on with the problem of ‘rules’ and their ‘exceptions’ and how to deal with them.

Your the one that brought color into this with your example.

This is why the best Philosophers/philosophies are routed in common sense. Even in their complexities. Like that of St. Thomas Aquinas./quote]
 
I don’t know if Socrates ever went to college, and yet was one of the wisest people who ever lived.
The Greeks were good at academe. Socrates wasn’t the beginning or end of intellectual endeavor.
How about with a little common sense, with what we observe and all people agree to be true.
Common sense tells us that the sun moves every day in the heavens, scientific endeavor tells us that the earth revolves.
'Science was born out of Philosophy. The scientific method has it’s place but cannot answer all of life’s questions.
Beats rhetoric.
Just because some bad philosophies came out of the “enlightenment” doesn’t mean that questions such as essence have been refuted. Just ignored.
Metaphysical concepts are not amenable to scientific examination, just because you think they’re ‘bad’, doesn’t make them ‘bad’.
If you beleive we all evolved from a single cell organism, then evolution is a bad answer to my question. It becomes too ambiguous and doesn’t make a distinction between a cat, a dog, a giraffe, etc…since we all evolved from the same “stuff”.
Hardly the point - cats evolved, dogs evolved, giraffe’s evolved we can investigate ‘stuff’.
So prior to the scientific method, people could not properly distinguish one thing from another?
Only on the surface and they usually got it wrong.
Your the one that brought color into this with your example.
As I said, it could have been any of a number of things. I admit that it was a mistake because you used my figurative use in such a way as to avoid your failure to deal with ‘refutation’.
This is why the best Philosophers/philosophies are routed in common sense. Even in their complexities. Like that of St. Thomas Aquinas.
So, we look up Aquinas to tell us about the physiology of cats (or women) and just what on earth has it to do with the question of rules and dealing with exceptions in the case of cats or women?
 
Like the site said, it is easy to throw out passages from scripture because they don’t fit with our contemporary culture, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t true. This is God’s word after all.

That is why we have a Magisterium. The site is picking and choosing as well. St. Paul also indicated that we should all be celibate. That is, marriage is only the best second choice for the weak. And we are supposed to be seperate…
Feanaro;3368310:
I would actually like to see a reasonable refutation of the points the site made as opposed to “that’s not a good site” or “it’s not a faithful Catholic site so ignore it”. Those are *ad hominem *
attacks, which although they may be true, do nothing to support your argument. Even apostates can speak the truth sometimes.

The Church spoke when it dropped the canon. Further, it has spoken on womens roles, including politics and public leadership.

The simplest way to refute it is that it asserts that pius Catholics can disagree. We cannot, we are not Protestants. The Pope is the undispited leader of the Church:
"If anyone should say that the Roman Pontiff has merely the function of inspection or direction but not full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church, not only in matters pertaining to faith and morals, but also in matters pertaining to the discipline and government of the Church throughout the entire world, or that he has only the principal share, but not the full plenitutde of this supreme power; or that this power of his is not ordinary and immediate over all Churches and over each individual Church, over all shepherds and all the faithful, and over each individual one of these: let him be anathema” - Vatican Council I, Dogmatic Constitution of the Church of Christ, #3
This is simply a case of someone trying to put a personal ideology forward as Catholic theology.
 
Beats rhetoric.

This isn’t about rhetoric but logic, which is more concrete than even the scientific method. You still have not responded to the link I supplied.

Metaphysical concepts are not amenable to scientific examination, just because you think they’re ‘bad’, doesn’t make them ‘bad’.

I never said scientific examination was bad. I believe it’s very good. What I do think is bad is materialism. Which basically teaches that matter is all there is. Since science can usually only tell us about matter, it can not be applied to concepts that do not deal with matter.

Only on the surface and they usually got it wrong.

Can you prove the truth of that statement with the scientific method?
 
Feanaro;3368310:
That is why we have a Magisterium. The site is picking and choosing as well. St. Paul also indicated that we should all be celibate. That is, marriage is only the best second choice for the weak. And we are supposed to be seperate…

Just to clear things up, I’m Catholic as well and agree with the Magisterium. I also do believe that it is better to be celibate. However, few can or are called to be.

The Church spoke when it dropped the canon. Further, it has spoken on womens roles, including politics and public leadership.

Key word here is “dropped”. Something that is dogmatic or deals with morality cannot be dropped. The fact that the canon was dropped shows that it is not dogmatic and can therefore be adopted again. For example, let’s say in fifty years the church allows priests to marry. That would be fine because it is not an issue of dogma or morality. However, after 200 years the church realizes this was not a wise decision and adopts celibacy once again. This would also be acceptable.

The simplest way to refute it is that it asserts that pius Catholics can disagree. We cannot, we are not Protestants. The Pope is the undispited leader of the Church:

Pius Catholics can disagree on issues that do not involve faith (dogma) or morals. Remember, it is only in these two areas that the Pope’s infallibility lies.
 
This isn’t about rhetoric but logic, which is more concrete than even the scientific method.
I’m afraid you left logic behind some time ago.
You still have not responded to the link I supplied.
There was nothing to respond to. “Look at this website ‘discuss’” isn’t responsive in the first place.
I never said scientific examination was bad. I believe it’s very good. What I do think is bad is materialism. Which basically teaches that matter is all there is. Since science can usually only tell us about matter, it can not be applied to concepts that do not deal with matter.
What on earth has all this to do with the matter in hand? Unless you’re prepared to deal with the question of ‘rules’ and the effect of exceptions upon them, this conversation becomes more and more pointless.

Is it that you want me to accept that there are ‘essences’ so that, for example, men and women are ‘essentially’ different in some completely untestable way? In some way that determines how we should live our lives on the basis of manufactured (significantly) ideas of the pre-scientific age? In a way that, no matter how many exceptions one finds, the exceptions will prove the ‘essences’ (according to you)?

Those things are just not going to happen.
Can you prove the truth of that statement with the scientific method?
Oh dear. The scientific method isn’t about proving ‘truth’ (whatever that may mean) it’s about providing better (more powerful – ie more explanatory, more predictive) explanations – and testing them.

Why are you desperately trying to avoid the question of ‘rules’ and the effect of ‘exceptions’ on them?
 
Kaninchen:

I believe we are talking past each other. I have gone back and read your previous posts to truly try to understand what you are saying. I believe we both may have articulated our position poorly and therefore are misunderstanding each other.

Here is where I think the misunderstanding lies. I am talking about general rules whereas I think you are talking about universal rules. In that case, you would be right in saying that an exception refutes a universal rule. However, that would not properly be called an exception per se, but a clear refutation. I think exceptions only apply to general rules.

A key difference from what I can ascertain from looking through the dictionary is that a general rule applies to all or most, and a universal rule only applies to all.

When you used the example of “All cats are white” then finding a cat of another color does indeed refute that statement. If you say however that “Most cats are white” finding a cat of another color does not refute that statement. Exceptions only apply to general rules, not universal ones.

The reason I got hung up on the color issue not being essential, is because universal rules have more weight than general ones. A better example would be “All cats are mammals” because being a mammal is essential to a cat. You cannot find a cat that is not a mammal. To distinguish a cat from another mammal obviously requires even more division, but the fact remains that a cat will always be a mammal.
 
Oh dear. The scientific method isn’t about proving ‘truth’ (whatever that may mean)
What do you mean by this statement? Do you believe objective truth exists or not? The latter is a yes or no question by the way. I don’t want any explanation or reason why you believe what you believe. Just curious.
 
Heh, I bet that person would really despise me, considering I’m a cantor and I intend on becoming a lawyer, and would eventually like to enter politics at some point. And as uncharitable and unChristian as it may be, I’m happy that I’ll be able to do that just to say “sorry, not listening to you.”
👍
 
Hello. I am curious that with all the flap about the novel the Da Vinci Code, just what Mary Magdalene’s role is perceived to be now? Have seen via the History Channel the Church has redefined her role from sinner. Thanks.
 
Kaninchen:

I believe we are talking past each other. I have gone back and read your previous posts to truly try to understand what you are saying. I believe we both may have articulated our position poorly and therefore are misunderstanding each other.

Speak only for yourself.
 
What do you mean by this statement? Do you believe objective truth exists or not? The latter is a yes or no question by the way. I don’t want any explanation or reason why you believe what you believe. Just curious.
I’m just curious as to your need for a yes/no answer where libraries could be filled - and have been filled- answering it.
 
I guess we have one question on the floor about the role of women in society. How about sending the other question to the philosophy forum? It seems rather pedantic here.

As far as women’s role in society. First it needs to be noted that men and women are not the same, and to not take that into consderation would be foolish. At the same time there are lots of differenty ways one can set up how the roles are placed. Some are better than others, but many will fit into a proper frame work. One important consideration here in the US and probably most of the West is to realize that career isn’t everything, figure out a proper balance. That would equally go for men as well as women.
 
Hello. I am curious that with all the flap about the novel the Da Vinci Code, just what Mary Magdalene’s role is perceived to be now? Have seen via the History Channel the Church has redefined her role from sinner. Thanks.
This is kind of off-topic, so you may want to start a new thread, but the DaVinci code is as controversial as the green-cheese theory of the moon. See you in Non-Catholic Religions over this topic? If you haven’t already started a thread there.
 
This is kind of off-topic, so you may want to start a new thread, but the DaVinci code is as controversial as the green-cheese theory of the moon. See you in Non-Catholic Religions over this topic? If you haven’t already started a thread there.
Hello. Thanks for the post. With all respect, I don’t think this topic would meet with much favor in the Non-Catholic portion of the forum either. I had just heard on the History Channel that Mary Magdalene’s role in Chruch History had been re-defined. Somehow, through the translation of the Bible from Greek? Coptic? the role Mary Magdelene played in Church History was skewed. This is what I have heard. “The fact that mention of her in the New Testament was placed next to the tale of the Prostitute and the Woman with the oil led people to believe the three were all the one and the same person.”🙂 Apparently the Church has redefined this. I just mentioned the Da Vinci Code as this was where I heard her role being questioned. So that is why I am asking. Thanks.
 
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