9/20/2006 9:51:32 PM
9/20/2006 10:09:51 PM
Please note well that there should be no hyphen between an "ly" adverb preceding an "ed" adjective ("On Epistemologically-Constructed [sic] Belief Systems"). An adverb does not modify a noun. One would not write, "Epistemologically Belief Systems." Thus, the adjective is needed and the element in question should not be hyphenated.Before you tackle advanced concepts, Gamecat, perhaps you should philosophize about the fundamentals. It is just a thought.
9/21/2006 3:46:11 AM
There's nothing wrong with starting an inquiry into philosophy with epistemology, it's not a bad point of departure.
9/21/2006 8:47:18 AM
9/21/2006 1:15:12 PM
Okay first of all I got 3 hours of sleep last night and I'm exausted -- so take it easy on me if I make a huge error.------
9/21/2006 1:41:33 PM
9/21/2006 2:07:55 PM
9/21/2006 2:19:55 PM
9/21/2006 2:48:13 PM
9/21/2006 4:00:09 PM
9/22/2006 2:49:58 PM
We're talking about your experiences and your propositions formed about those experiences. It's a way of showing that there's at least some places skepticism can't breach. You're assuming that logic works differently than it does, which is an assumption you can't really make.
9/22/2006 2:51:21 PM
Agree, all truths are based on perception.
9/22/2006 2:54:00 PM
No, I'd argue knowledge is a combination of applying structures and categories of the mind to our senses. That much I'm with, but there are logical necessities that are true regardless of whether there were any minds around to think about them.The construction itself is, of course, a creation.
9/22/2006 3:09:40 PM
I think logic is a human creation based on perceived reality, so I would argue that it wouldnt exist without the mind.
9/22/2006 5:27:24 PM
That's surely the case in the sense that our internal representations of logic are internal, but analytic truths hold across "all possible universes".
9/22/2006 6:40:35 PM
Such as?
9/23/2006 2:59:10 AM
Analytic truths such as (P or not P).
9/23/2006 3:06:05 AM
Whatever is, is. I think that goes without saying.
9/23/2006 3:47:55 PM
That's not what I'm saying.Whatever is, is -- but it might not be in "all possible universes". Surely if you see red right now, you can envision a scenario in which you might not see red. It's not a "necessary" truth.
9/23/2006 3:55:26 PM
Did I kill this thread? I'm sorry if I immediately loaded it down with dense terminology and definitions, but I think that these things are important in such a discussion.
9/25/2006 12:27:17 PM
No, I think I just ran myself into a brick wall trying to figure out exactly how to frame the question this thread is supposed to ask. We've gotten locked into a digression of sorts, even a productive one, but it seems like one that could take a thread and a half to explain.What's an epistemologically sound belief system in which to indoctrinate oneself to achieve whatever the hell we think we're supposed to achieve?
9/25/2006 2:11:17 PM
I thought you were arguing in defense of universal truths, but you responded by saying the opposite.
9/25/2006 2:11:21 PM
Absolutely not. I'd argue in defense of the universal truth of ephemeral experience (we experience an interpretation of reality), and energy fields. That's just about it.
9/25/2006 2:15:29 PM