Words have no Meaning

Discussion in 'General Philosophy' started by BeHereNow, Feb 24, 2008.

  1. granpa Registered Senior Member

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    belief is formed through fuzzy logic on the basis of fuzzy evidence.
    knowledge is formed through deductive logic on the basis of (nonfuzzy) facts.

    the difference between them is that one accepts fuzzy logic values (values between true and false) and the other doesnt.
     
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  3. Myles Registered Senior Member

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    You seem to have got hold of the wrong end of the stick. I can believe in unicorns, alien invaders, cabbages on mars without objective evidence. There is no limit to what beliefs I can have .

    Knowledge is belief supported be evidence. I assumed you would infer that I meant objective evidence, i.e., evidence that would be acceptable to others- see what I said about rain and my meaning should be clear
     
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  5. granpa Registered Senior Member

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    i cant.
     
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  7. Myles Registered Senior Member

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    If I sent you a pic would that help ?
     
  8. granpa Registered Senior Member

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    nope. i cant arbitrarily make myself believe in something.

    one must distinguish between believing (thinking), feeling, and knowing. what you are describing sounds more like a FEELING than a belief. feelings are the result of inductive thinking. like the monster behind the shower curtain. i can make myself feel that there is a monster behind the shower curtain. but i dont believe it.

    in inductive thinking you temporarily suspend your disbelief in something in order to get a FEEL for whether it is probably true or not.

    suspension of disbelief is not the same as belief.
    FEELING is not the same as believing.
     
    Last edited: Feb 26, 2008
  9. Myles Registered Senior Member

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    Not necessarily. People who believe in alien abduction will describe in great detail how they were taken to the spaceship, what was done to them and so. Some are probably hoaxers but I suggest there are a few who believe it because they have the (subjective) evidence.

    Consifder also how people behave under hypnosis, not to mention all those who believe in miracles which cannot be supported by evidence
     
  10. granpa Registered Senior Member

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    so, in other words, naive, nonobjective people believe in things based on the evidence of subjective feelings. you may be onto something there. but i dont think thats true of mature objective adults.
     
  11. Enmos Valued Senior Member

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    How can any human be objective ?
     
  12. granpa Registered Senior Member

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    objectivity

    a subjective person sees whatever they look for. look for a monster behind the shower curtain and you will see it. an objective person honestly looks for the objective truth. look for the objective truth and you will find it.

    its just a matter of being willing to accept the truth whether it is what you want it to be or not. that is objectivity.
     
    Last edited: Feb 26, 2008
  13. Enmos Valued Senior Member

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    I don't think objective truth can be experienced though.. what exactly do you mean by it ?
     
  14. granpa Registered Senior Member

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    i mean exactly what people usually mean. as far as not being able to experience (know) objective truth, there isnt much i can say. i have told you exactly what you must do. you will just have to try it and see for yourself.

    our senses are fuzzy but fuzziness can be eliminated with error correction techniques. thats precisely what 'feelings' are for. also not everything needs to be known precisely. if there was an atom bomb 10 feet over my head i may not know whether it is 10 feet or 10.001 feet but either way i know that if it went off i would die.
     
  15. sowhatifit'sdark Valued Senior Member

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    Is it so easy to know what one wants to believe?
    I assume, also, that you believe in free will? Was your process at arriving in the belief objective?
    If you don't believe in free will, I find your sense of what an objective person does rather odd. They would be compelled to have their beliefs just like everyone else.
     
  16. granpa Registered Senior Member

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    why you would believe that beyond me.

    so? as long as they, by being objective, are compelled to believe in the objective truth what does it matter?
     
  17. sowhatifit'sdark Valued Senior Member

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  18. granpa Registered Senior Member

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    one doesnt need to know what one wants to believe. one simply has to be willing to accept the truth regardless of what one wants.
    i have no idea why you are bringing up the issue of freewill. i see no connection at all. what two ways of arriving at a belief are you talking about. why is the distinction meaningless in a deterministic universe?

    i am saying that objective people dont form beliefs based on the evidence of subjective feelings.

    beliefs are based on fuzzy logic. knowledge isnt. thats what i meant when i said that fuzziness can be eliminated (through objective error correction).
     
    Last edited: Feb 26, 2008
  19. Myles Registered Senior Member

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    How about all the people who believe in god ?
     
  20. Vkothii Banned Banned

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    The usual crop of ideas about the subjects of free will, objectivity, etc.

    "Free will" is a strange beast. "Free" means unbound or unconstrained, and "will" means control or constraint, so it's non sequitur.
    "Choice" is an easier version to deal with, in my lexicon.

    We have choice, or we can choose. It's an advantage.
     
  21. sowhatifit'sdark Valued Senior Member

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    What I was heading toward was that recent psychology and neuroscience seems to question how much the conscious mind really knows about why it makes the choices it makes, including those choices that seem objective and logical.



    I thought you made a distinction between those who search for knowledge that fits with what they want and those who search for the truth regardless of whether it fits with their wants. The distinction becomes meaningless in a deterministic universe because each would simply end up in a belief. The belief being the last domino in some chain.

    That word 'form' could be misleading. It makes it sound like they create or choose their beliefs. In a deterministic universe they would not choose their beliefs. Just like the people you are calling subjective, the beliefs would simply happen.
     
  22. Myles Registered Senior Member

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    Free will , as used by philosophers, means the ability to make unconstrained choices

    Why do you believe that will means control or constraint ?
     
  23. granpa Registered Senior Member

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    if you would just say 'no, being objective wont change anything. its all beliefs' i could understand. you would be wrong but i would understand. bringing up freewill makes it sound like i am suggesting something mystical or supernatural.

    objectivity is simply being perfectly willing to accept the outcome of ones reasoning whether it is what you want it to be or not. it has the effect of eliminating subjective bias. there is nothing mystical about it.

    eliminating the fuzziness from our fuzzy logic thinking is simply a matter of error correction. again nothing mystical here.
     

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