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Absolute Fact / Universal Truth

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 Adavardes
01-05-2009, 10:37 PM
#51
Please, stop with the existential, off-topic comments.

They're perfectly on-topic. I believe the topic is Absolute Fact/Universal Truth. That's what I was talking about, whether you like my philosophy or not. Since you just declared that you hate philosophy. Or was that real? I don't absolutely know.

You exist. Absolute Fact, even if you are a computer program.
I exist. Absolute Fact, but thats harder to prove as you are not seeing me right now.
We both need oxygen to live. Absolute fact.
You posted a message on Lucas Forums. Absolute fact.

So you know for an absolute fact that I really exist? That you really exist? That we both are breathing right now? That this forum exists? You know that, without a shadow of a doubt, and without a shadow of a doubt, you cannot be wrong? You are an omnipotent, omniscient being, that can say anything, and know, absolutely, for a fact, with complete and total objectivity, that what you see, and what you know, are actually real.

Ha. I doubt it.
 Det. Bart Lasiter
01-05-2009, 10:45 PM
#52
i am a bot beep boop bop
 True_Avery
01-05-2009, 11:16 PM
#53
Meh, I'm done.

By definition, there is now nothing to do with this topic.
 Achilles
01-05-2009, 11:21 PM
#54
I hate philosophy.FWIW, I don't think very much of what's being posited here qualifies as "philosophy". Philosophy tends to be rooted in logic and well...
 Adavardes
01-05-2009, 11:26 PM
#55
Meh, I'm done.

By definition, there is now nothing to do with this topic.

So, instead of admitting that you can be wrong, that it is very possible that your concept could be incorrect, as I have conceded about my own several times, you're going to dismiss the entire debate. Instead of admitting that because you could be wrong, and that my concept could hold water, that reality may be questionable, and that because of imagination, things can be both real and unreal, you are going to end the argument.

What if air doesn't exist, and we only die when we fail to breath because our brain has been programmed as children with pre-concieved concepts built into our very genetics that tell us to breath, or we die, and the brain shuts down in a powerful psycho-somatic fit of failure to comply with a suggestion so old, it's become part of our genetic instinct. Well, we know air exists, right? We can measure it, and see it. But what if we can only do that because someone suggested to us that it's what really exists? That we have bent our perspectives to see something that isn't there. With imagination, a child can see a person that isn't there. Why can't we see air, even when it doesn't exist? (Seeing is being used as a rather large term, by the way)

Not saying it does. Not saying it doesn't. Just saying, it could be either. And as a person that is not right all the time, it's safe to say that you can concede that you could be wrong, and not know it. That knowing if you are absolutely right or wrong cannot be done, due to the fact that we don't know if something is real or unreal. I'm willing to accept that your theory holds water, and take it seriously. You want to know why you should take mine seriously? Because you can be just as wrong as I can.

FWIW, I don't think very much of what's being posited here qualifies as "philosophy". Philosophy tends to be rooted in logic and well...

Yup, because your definition of logical cannot be wrong, and I'm just a rambling lunatic. No amount of derogatory statements are going to change the fact that I have formed this theory, if you want to call it that, with a firm basis in "logic".

If you can be wrong, and you can make mistakes, then logically, you could be wrong about your side in this debate. Inversely, so can I. Maybe I'm full of ****. Okay, I can deal with that. Can you deal with not being able to absolutely know that you are absolutely right? To know that, you can never be wrong about anything, ever. Are you?

Love how you revert to name calling, by the way.
 Achilles
01-05-2009, 11:31 PM
#56
What if air doesn't exist, and we only die when we fail to breath because our brain has been programmed as children with pre-concieved concepts built into our very genetics that tell us to breath, or we die, and the brain shuts down in a powerful psycho-somatic fit of failure to comply with a suggestion so old, it's become part of our genetic instinct.This seems like a very easily testable hypothesis. Why don't you put your money where your mouth is and get back to us when you have something more than "what ifs" to throw at us? TTFN.

Yup, because your definition of logical cannot be wrong, and I'm just a rambling lunatic.QFT

No amount of derogatory statements are going to change the fact that I have formed this theory, if you want to call it that, with a firm basis in "logic".Err, technically it would be a hypothesis and so far you don't even meet the minimum qualifications for that.

If you can be wrong, and you can make mistakes, then logically, you could be wrong about your side in this debate. Inversely, so can I. Maybe I'm full of ****. Okay, I can deal with that. Can you deal with not being able to absolutely know that you are absolutely right? To know that, you can never be wrong about anything, ever. Are you?It's not about me being right. It's about whether your ideas have merit or not. That has absolutely nothing to do with me whatsoever.

Love how you revert to name calling, by the way.:confused:
 Adavardes
01-05-2009, 11:40 PM
#57
This seems like a very easily testable hypothesis. Why don't you put your money where your mouth is and get back to us when you have something more than "what ifs" to throw at us? TTFN.

All you're doing, if I'm at all right in this, is throwing around "what ifs" and calling them more than that. I actually don't think it's possible to do what you're asking me to do, which would kind of lead us to a logical crossroads. I can't prove to you that I have any merit to your qualifications, and you can't prove to me that you know absolute facts. Having the ability to be wrong and all.

Err, technically it would be a hypothesis and so far you don't even meet the minimum qualifications for that.

That's philosophy, mate. Funny thing about it is that even Empiricism is a philosophy. Just one way of doing things, created and shaped by a man. Descartes, wasn't it?

It's not about me being right. It's about whether your ideas have merit or not. That has absolutely nothing to do with me whatsoever.

You're applying your concepts of logic, which you cannot know are right or wrong if my concept holds water (NOT SAYING IT DOES), to try and prove whether something I'm saying has "merit". Okay.

EDIT: Let me just paint a picture here, so that maybe this makes more sense. I know that if I were to claim that nothing is true, then my argument can't be true, and if my argument can't be true, then something has to be true. That's a paradox. I know that, I logically recognise that. Which is why, during the course of this debate, I have instead suggested that things can be both true and untrue, but we don't have the capability to recognise which is which, because we can create that which is not real, mistake it for real, and be wrong.

I'm presenting my argument as something that could undoubtedly be very, very wrong. I am speculating. That's all we ever do. Speculate. But you're not willing to concede that. You're saying that speculation isn't what we're doing. You're laying down the facts, and I'm a rambling lunatic. What makes you more right than me, if evidence could be imaginative constructs, if you could be wrong, if you could be mistaking what is real for what is not? You probably can't. Maybe. So we speculate.
 Achilles
01-05-2009, 11:47 PM
#58
All you're doing, if I'm at all right in this, is throwing around "what ifs" and calling them more than that. I actually don't think it's possible to do what you're asking me to do, which would kind of lead us to a logical crossroads. I can't prove to you that I have any merit to your qualifications, and you can't prove to me that you know absolute facts. Having the ability to be wrong and all.

That's philosophy, mate. Funny thing about it is that even Empiricism is a philosophy. Just one way of doing things, created and shaped by a man. Descartes, wasn't it?

You're applying your concepts of logic, which you cannot know are right or wrong if my concept holds water (NOT SAYING IT DOES), to try and prove whether something I'm saying has "merit". Okay.Sophism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophists)
 True_Avery
01-05-2009, 11:50 PM
#59
You miss the very point of your own argument.

So, instead of admitting that you can be wrong, that it is very possible that your concept could be incorrect, as I have conceded about my own several times, you're going to dismiss the entire debate.
I cannot admit I am wrong, and I cannot call myself right, because both right and wrong are human constructs.

There is no such thing as incorrect, because incorrect and correct are flawed due to being part of human language trying to decribe a universe that cannot be proven, or disproven to exist.

But proven and disprove are human constructs, so...

Do you get it? I could point out the flaws for infinity, but infinity does not exist as time is a flawed human concept.

I am walking away from the debate because...

There is nothing to debate, because there is nothing. But, that statement is flawed, because there cannot be nothing, as nothing is a human concept.

Instead of admitting that because you could be wrong, and that my concept could hold water, that reality may be questionable, and that because of imagination, things can be both real and unreal, you are going to end the argument.

I cannot be wrong, because there is no such thing as wrong.

There is no such thing as no such thing.

None of it can be proven, or disproven.

Your argument cannot hold water, because a human typed it out. It cannot hold water, because water is a human construct, and the saying "cannot hold water" does and does not exist, etc etc etc etc.

I end it, because there is no beginning. Neither end nor beginning exist, as time is a human construct within flawed subjective human language.

Not saying it does. Not saying it doesn't. Just saying, it could be either.
Either or, or either. Either does not exist. Neither does does, or doesn't.

But you cannot prove that they do or don't.

There is no logical, or human way to present this. At all. But at the same time...

And as a person that is not right all the time, it's safe to say that you can concede that you could be wrong, and not know it. That knowing if you are absolutely right or wrong cannot be done, due to the fact that we don't know if something is real or unreal. I'm willing to accept that your theory holds water, and take it seriously. You want to know why you should take mine seriously? Because you can be just as wrong as I can.
Stop calling me right or wrong and undermining your own argument.

I am not stupid. If you had bothered to read, I explained earlier that I was a full supporter of moral relativism for a long time.

I know this branch of philosophy, if it can be called that. You by basis of your own argument, you and I can neither be right nor wrong about it as right and wrong may or may not exist, but may or may not may or may not exist.

I walk away because there is nothing to debate, by definition of the argument.

The most logical thing I can do is walk away from something that is, by definition, impossible to defeat.

I will never admit that you are right, because by doing so I am claiming an absolute. I will never I am wrong to this argument, because there is no way to claim either, as both are subjective human constructs.

Stop sitting on top of your high horse. You cannot claim victory over a debate that cannot be debated, and can neither be right nor wrong, seeing as neither exist, or not exist.

It comes down to a theory called Solipsism, and some forms of Nihilism, which I am familiar with and understand the concept of, and can articulate it just as well as you can.

Stop being so arrogant.

The End.
 Adavardes
01-05-2009, 11:59 PM
#60
Sophism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophists)

Human concept.

I cannot admit I am wrong, and I cannot call myself right, because both right and wrong are human constructs.

There is no such thing as incorrect, because incorrect and correct are flawed due to being part of human language trying to decribe a universe that cannot be proven, or disproven to exist.

But proven and disprove are human constructs, so...

Do you get it? I could point out the flaws for infinity, but infinity does not exist as time is a flawed human concept.

I am walking away from the debate because...

There is nothing to debate, because there is nothing. But, that statement is flawed, because there cannot be nothing, as nothing is a human concept.

Maybe. But this is why we speculate. Create concepts. We're trying to find the absolutes. But maybe we never can. Maybe it's too far beyond us. If it is, we'll never know, will we?

Thank you for, at the very least, respecting the possibilities. I'm sorry if I came off as arrogant. I never meant to be so, and you have my sincerest apologies. Maybe you're right. Maybe I'm right. Who knows? I look at this as an intellectual stimulus, an opportunity to question things, and wonder "why is something that way, why does it mean this, why does that always mean that?" Fun, really. I'm not trying to be mean or arrogant, or call your entire life into question out of spite or hatred. Just trying to get you to ask the question, "why?"
 mimartin
01-06-2009, 12:03 AM
#61
FWIW, I don't think very much of what's being posited here qualifies as "philosophy". Philosophy tends to be rooted in logic and well...
QFT, but after college philosophy, I still agree with True_Avery
I hate philosophy.
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 12:04 AM
#62
Human concept. So is the concept that everything is nothing more than a human concept. Ignore your own rules at the risk of your credibility.

QFT, but after college philosophy, I still agree with True_AveryI had to take quite a bit for both my grad and undergrad degrees too but luckily it never soured me to anything more than sloppy thinking.
 True_Avery
01-06-2009, 12:08 AM
#63
Thank you for, at the very least, respecting the possibilities. I'm sorry if I came off as arrogant. I never meant to be so, and you have my sincerest apologies. Maybe you're right. Maybe I'm right. Who knows? I look at this as an intellectual stimulus, an opportunity to question things, and wonder "why is something that way, why does it mean this, why does that always mean that?" Fun, really. I'm not trying to be mean or arrogant, or call your entire life into question out of spite or hatred. Just trying to get you to ask the question, "why?"
Ok, then I apologize for snapping at you.

Its just, I'd expand upon the debate if there was anything to debate about. Being that I'm a Nihilist for the most part, I get where you are coming from and understand it enough to articulate it, but due to my own human flaws have a hard time comprehending it fully. And, well, by definition it is seemingly impossible to comprehend.

So, for the sake of my own sanity and not further spamming the thread with drivel, I'm respectfully backing out of the topic as I feel its gone as far as it can go.

Good day to you, good sir.
 Adavardes
01-06-2009, 12:13 AM
#64
So is the concept that everything is nothing more than a human concept. Ignore your own rules at the risk of your credibility.

Achilles, are you completely ignoring what I'm saying? It's a human concept, and human concepts have the same possibility of being right or wrong. Wrong and right are human concepts, so they could be wrong. I say that human concepts are human concepts, but that concept could be wrong. You say that my concept of human concepts being human concepts is wrong, but you could be wrong. One of us, or all of us, could also be right.

This is a war that cannot be won with "You lose your credibility", or "You don't follow logic". Logic and credibility could be incorrect concepts. They could also be right. So, we do as we have always do, and speculate as to what we're doing, trusting in the fact that we are right. Like T_A said:

The most logical thing I can do is walk away from something that is, by definition, impossible to defeat.

I have had fun, though. It's kind of frustrating to come to an end where you can invariably go no further without coming to shaky ground, and I can understand why you want to keep claiming that my argument holds no water, or eats itself. Truth is, I don't care, because eating itself may be wrong, or holding no water may be wrong.

I can't prove myself right, you can't prove me wrong. Diffusion of responsibility on the person claiming something, IE, certain debate etiquette, could also be wrong, or right. I think I've said all that can be said, and this debate has met its invariable dead end.
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 12:29 AM
#65
Achilles, are you completely ignoring what I'm saying?Not at all. How could I possibly find the flaws in your arguments without actually reading them?

It's a human concept, and human concepts have the same possibility of being right or wrong.No, not the same possibility. Please go back and re-read post #45.

Wrong and right are human concepts, so they could be wrong.Depends on the context. True or false is not the same as good or evil. One is a means of comparison for something observable (and therefore outside this "human concept" mumbo jumbo). The other is a human construct (so far as I'm willing to argue). They are not equal, just as any other context you wish to provide for the nebulous terms you used above.

I say that human concepts are human concepts, but that concept could be wrong.Including yours. *Poof* your argument disappears. We're all prepared to move along. How about you?

You say that my concept of human concepts being human concepts is wrong, but you could be wrong. One of us, or all of us, could also be right.

This is a war that cannot be won with "You lose your credibility", or "You don't follow logic". Logic and credibility could be incorrect concepts. They could also be right.Sophism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophists)
 Adavardes
01-06-2009, 12:44 AM
#66
No, not the same possibility. Please go back and re-read post #45.

Depends on the context. True or false is not the same as good or evil. One is a means of comparison for something observable (and therefore outside this "human concept" mumbo jumbo). The other is a human construct (so far as I'm willing to argue). They are not equal, just as any other context you wish to provide for the nebulous terms you used above.

Including yours. *Poof* your argument disappears. We're all prepared to move along. How about you?

Sophism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophists)

1. Mate, I already answered that.


EDIT: Let me just paint a picture here, so that maybe this makes more sense. I know that if I were to claim that nothing is true, then my argument can't be true, and if my argument can't be true, then something has to be true. That's a paradox. I know that, I logically recognise that. Which is why, during the course of this debate, I have instead suggested that things can be both true and untrue, but we don't have the capability to recognise which is which, because we can create that which is not real, mistake it for real, and be wrong.

2. So you're absolutely right about your observations? See point 1.

3. I was willing to end the debate on the basis that our arguments could all go *poof*, or they cannot. Trying to say otherwise would be a concept, that can be wrong, or can be right, if what I'm saying is right, which it could be wrong.

4. Failing to see what defining the concept I have already admitted could be wrong or right does for your argument.

My friend, we have reached an impass which you cannot further disreputate my argument without running the risk that I am right and you are wrong, and I cannot further prove my argument as right without running the risk of also being wrong. Again, I admire the tenacity, but I think you'll find that you're going to keep circling around the same point that can't be proven over and over, because, as T_A said:

Its just, I'd expand upon the debate if there was anything to debate about. Being that I'm a Nihilist for the most part, I get where you are coming from and understand it enough to articulate it, but due to my own human flaws have a hard time comprehending it fully. And, well, by definition it is seemingly impossible to comprehend.
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 1:02 AM
#67
My friend, we have reached an impass which you cannot further disreputate my argument...At no point has that been my job.

Burden of proof (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burden_of_proof)

...without running the risk that I am right and you are wrong...I have no stake in your claims, therefore there is no risk to me.

...and I cannot further prove my argument as right without running the risk of also being wrong.Gee, that didn't sound like such a horrible thing when you were asking us to consider that we were the ones that didn't get it. I guess that shoe only fits on one foot?
 Adavardes
01-06-2009, 1:07 AM
#68
At no point has that been my job.

Burden of proof (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burden_of_proof)

Diffusion of responsibility on the person claiming something, IE, certain debate etiquette, could also be wrong, or right.

Burden of proof = debate etiquette.
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 1:11 AM
#69
Burden of proof = debate etiquette.Sophism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophists)

And with that, I'm finished. The last word is yours lest some resurrects the discussion with something worth discussing.
 Jae Onasi
01-06-2009, 1:16 AM
#70
Student: How do I know I exist?
Professor: And whom shall I say is asking?

Saying 'all things are subjective' is an absolute.... We may work within a set human construct, but it's based on what we as most humans can normally experience, see, feel, measure, and so forth in a generally similar way (severe mental illness excluded, since the brain chemistry/anatomy/physiology prevents normal perception). The wavelength of green light is a fact. Whether we as humans can see it correctly or not is a perception issue, but it doesn't change the light's wavelength. Some things are true regardless of our human limits and subjectivity.
 vanir
01-06-2009, 6:25 AM
#71
Um...definitely not wanting to get in the middle of this argument, but have an inkling where it might have, in small part come from (or why it's being held onto with such determination).

Adavardes, schizophrenia is the misinterpretation of normal social stimuli by an incorrectly adapted brain chemistry (typically for deeply rooted emotional reasons such as child sexual abuse). People with schizophrenia might hear voices and they're not making it up, their mind is attaching memory associations to everyday stimuli in an unnatural fashion (sounding just like a disembodied voice they can hear through their ears just like the real thing). Hence the victims are generally paranoid, since they're extremely distressed by their strict medical illness, to say the least.
As an example, you were sexually abused by a man with dark coloured glasses and a gruff voice whilst heavy metal was playing in the background. Years later you move next door to someone who quietly plays heavy metal (most of the time you can't hear it and it doesn't bother you), but after several months you begin seeing faces at the window, a man with dark coloured glasses. Frightened, knowing there is nobody there you flee to the bathroom and lock yourself in, but hear a gruff voice yelling abuse at you from outside. Only you can hear it.
Get the picture?

The first strategy is learning to tell yourself to let reality go. Nothing's real, so that way you can say, even though you know this is real, since nothing is real it doesn't matter. It's not real just because you say it isn't, even if those things are still happening all the time real as daylight. You learn to ignore them with your hand over your ears and your eyes closed saying the mantra, "not real, not real, not real..."

But it doesn't work. You go loopey like that.

What works in the end is fully understanding what is happening to you. What your mind is doing to you in spite of yourself. And it is as simple as the medical explanations you've been getting all along (because trust me 99% of all schizophrenics immediately seek help). Most of the trick is in fact finding a doctor you get along with well enough that they explain in the way which best suits you, someone who has a bit of empathy for you.


Now I'm not saying that any of this relates to you at all Adavardes. Quite the contrary. I think somewhere in your subconscious you've been levelling this genuine modern social concern through the arguments you've presented here. They seem structured such a way. Quite admirable actually.

But as has been mentioned more or less by some and others, good scientific process is the key. When reality becomes questionable, personally or professionally, strict scientific protocols clear it all up nicely.

Facts can be absolutely true. Not always, but they can be ;)
 Samuel Dravis
01-06-2009, 11:26 AM
#72
Interestingly, if someone really did take solipsism to its logical end, they'd be much more like a hard realist than the odd skeptical doubter. Adavardes' continual attachment to the metaphysical-objective here is the only thing that allows him to doubt as he does, yet that seems strangely contradictory to his claim that our ideas are "human constructs." Why make such an exception?
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 1:44 PM
#73
Facts can be absolutely true. Not always, but they can be ;)Perhaps I could better understand the argument if you could provide an example of a time where a fact was false. Not an example where we misunderstood a fact and had to revise our model after further observation, but where a fact was something other than a fact.

Thanks in advance.
 Yar-El
01-06-2009, 3:31 PM
#74
Perhaps I could better understand the argument if you could provide an example of a time where a fact was false. Not an example where we misunderstood a fact and had to revise our model after further observation, but where a fact was something other than a fact.

Thanks in advance.
Ah. Your argument is based on exceptions.

Whole civilizations believed these were absolute facts -

(1) World is flat.
(2) Universe revolved around the Earth.
(3) Greek Gods.
(4) Salem Witch Trials. Methodologies for detecting witches.
(5) Earth is hollow.
(6) King Tut is an actual god.
(7) Sun is the only harbanger of gravity in our solar system.
(8) The universe is slowing down.
(9) Life can't exist without conditions similar to our own.
(10) Gods control the weather.
(11) There is nothing beyond Pluto.
(12) Large sea monsters will swallow whole fleets of ships.
(13) Earth's center has a sun.
(14) Large civilizations exist near the Earth's core.
(15) The Atom is the smallest mollecule.
(16) Etc...

Modern day human facts are not absolute.
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 3:35 PM
#75
Ah. Your argument is based on exceptions. And your rebuttal is based on a lack of understanding the difference between a fact and a model.

All of your examples are models of understanding. None of them are facts.

"That bird is black" is a fact. "All birds are black" is a model which can be altered by the introduction of new facts, such as the observation of a bird which is not black.

So again, can someone please provide an example of a time where a fact was not a fact.
 Yar-El
01-06-2009, 3:53 PM
#76
And your rebuttal is based on a lack of understanding the difference between a fact and a model.

All of your examples are models of understanding. None of them are facts.

"That bird is black" is a fact. "All birds are black" is a model which can be altered by the introduction of new facts, such as the observation of a bird which is not black.

So again, can someone please provide an example of a time where a fact was not a fact.
Well Achilles. I don't know what to say. People are proving you wrong, and your creating a string of exceptions. Civilizations believed those listed above to be factually true. They were not models of understanding at the time. I sense we have hit a wall. Its been a good conversation, and thank you for keeping it civil. I don't see how we can continue when exceptions are being made. Facts are not absolute from where I sit; thus, they always change when new tools for taking measurements are developed. Nothing modern man has developed is absolute. Thanks Achilles.
 Det. Bart Lasiter
01-06-2009, 4:06 PM
#77
Well Achilles. I don't know what to say. People are proving you wrong, and your creating a string of exceptions. Civilizations believed those listed above to be factually true. They were not models of understanding at the time. I sense we have hit a wall. Its been a good conversation, and thank you for keeping it civil. I don't see how we can continue when exceptions are being made. Facts are not absolute from where I sit; thus, they always change when new tools for taking measurements are developed. Nothing modern man has developed is absolute. Thanks Achilles.only none of the things you mentioned were proven via empirical evidence or were never considered facts~
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 4:10 PM
#78
Well Achilles. I don't know what to say. People are proving you wrong, and your creating a string of exceptions.I'm simply pointing out that what you think a fact is and what a fact actually is are not the same thing.

I've invited you to provide a single example to support the claim that facts are not always facts, and you've yet to do so.

Civilizations believed those listed above to be factually true.No doubt, but I don't see what that has to do with the price of tea in China. Building bad models based on facts is an argument against the unreliability of bad models, not of facts themselves.

The sun still appears to go around the earth even though our understanding of the cosmos allows us to know that the opposite it true. The fact it appears this way didn't change because we got a better model. The model got better because we made better observations.

They were not models of understanding at the time.Of course they were. The people that believed that the sun went around the earth absolutely accepted that this was understood to be true. Doesn't mean that it was.

I sense we have hit a wall. Its been a good conversation, and thank you for keeping it civil. I don't see how we can continue when exceptions are being made.No exception was asked for. I only set the requirement that we keep apples in the apple cart and oranges in the orange cart. Your argument that apples and oranges are indistinguishable from one another is the impasse.

Facts are not absolute from where I sit;Your LF alias is "Yar-El". True or false? Fact or not-fact?

Please let me know where you see the grey matter in this example. Because I don't see any.

...thus, they always change when new tools for taking measurements are developed. No, the models do. Usually when new facts are discovered.

Nothing modern man has developed is absolute.Moving the goalpost. This isn't a discussion the "absolute nature of man's creations". It's a discussion as to whether or not facts exist. Please try to keep it on-topic.

Thanks Achilles.My pleasure.
 Darth InSidious
01-06-2009, 5:11 PM
#79
(5) Earth is hollow.
Care to source that?
(6) King Tut is an actual god.
Please don't talk about things you clearly know nothing about. Unless you would like to regale us with your vast knowledge of the netjeru and their relationship with the netjer nefer?
(10) Gods control the weather.
Actually, approx. 2bn people still believe that. cf: The Fifth Way.

Modern day human facts are not absolute.
Define 'absolute', 'fact', 'modern', and non-human facts, kthx.


So again, can someone please provide an example of a time where a fact was not a fact.
That sounds like a challenge. :D

How about the 'fact' that burning releases the phlogiston in a substance?
 Yar-El
01-06-2009, 5:21 PM
#80
My curiosity couldn't resist this -


Moving the goalpost. This isn't a discussion the "absolute nature of man's creations". It's a discussion as to whether or not facts exist. Please try to keep it on-topic.
This subject was spawned from my original statement. I wasn't the one who moved the goalpost. All of my replys focused on man created facts not being absolute. I mentioned that line several times; therfore, I wasn't talking about is there a absolute truth to the universe? :D You can check back even to the previous thread. :xp:
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 5:21 PM
#81
That sounds like a challenge. :D

How about the 'fact' that burning releases the phlogiston in a substance?This one (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phlogiston_theory)?)

The phlogiston theory <snip>, first stated in 1667 by Johann Joachim Becher, is an obsolete scientific theory that posited the existence of, in addition to the classical four elements of the Greeks, an additional fire-like element called “phlogiston” that was contained within combustible bodies, and released during combustion. The theory was an attempt to explain oxidation processes such as combustion and the rusting of metals.Emphasis added.

Sounds more like a hypothesis (proposed model of understanding) to me.

All of my replys focused on man created facts not being absolute. What is a "man-created fact"? I strongly suspect that whatever your response is, it will look strikingly similar to a model and bare almost no resemblance to a fact.
 Q
01-06-2009, 5:33 PM
#82
How about the 'fact' that burning releases the phlogiston in a substance?
Yeah, luminiferous aether (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminiferous_aether) and phlogiston are two of my favorites. :D
 Yar-El
01-06-2009, 5:50 PM
#83
What is a "man-created fact"? I strongly suspect that whatever your response is, it will look strikingly similar to a model...
I process information on both the left and right side of my brain; thus, you are correct in saying my answer is one of philosophy and science. It would be excessively complex; however, my resolution couldn't be tested by any current system. My answer contains literature, history, sciences, and religion.

I will stop at this point. Thanks again Achilles. :)
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 5:58 PM
#84
:words:Okay see you bye bye
 Adavardes
01-06-2009, 6:15 PM
#85
Let me pose a question to you, Achilles. Have you ever considered that, throughout this entire debate, your styles and etiquettes of debating might not be correct? That you may be wrong in how you are approaching this entire discussion, and that, as a human being, you've made a mistake, and that your reasoning, logic, and concepts of what is real, and what isn't real, could be incorrect? They could be correct, but don't they have the possibility of being incorrect? And that the labels, concepts, and absolutes your laying down might not be true, because they might not be real, and your mind is convincing you that a figment of your imagination is, in fact, real? That just because someone else confirms what you believe is real doesn't mean that it couldn't be due to a form of mass-suggestion, or something to that effect?

"That bird is black."

Are you absolutely sure that the bird exists, and is black? Are you positively sure? Can you tell me that you have never been wrong about anything, and cannot be wrong about anything, so, by logical conclusion, absolutely cannot be wrong about this?

I highly, HIGHLY doubt it. And that's what this is really about. Nobody can know absolutes, and even my saying that, my saying everything I have said in this thread, just as everything you have said in this thread, is possibly wrong. And possibly right. But we can't really know. So we speculate, and that's as much as we can do.

[/thread]
 EnderWiggin
01-06-2009, 6:15 PM
#86
Well Achilles. I don't know what to say. People are proving you wrong, and your creating a string of exceptions.

False.


Please don't talk about things you clearly know nothing about. Unless you would like to regale us with your vast knowledge of the netjeru and their relationship with the netjer nefer?

Leave it to the egyptologist :xp:


This subject was spawned from my original statement. I wasn't the one who moved the goalpost. All of my replys focused on man created facts not being absolute. I mentioned that line several times; therfore, I wasn't talking about is there a absolute truth to the universe? :D You can check back even to the previous thread. :xp:
1. Yes, you did 'move the goalpost.'
2. Even if your replies focused on 'man created facts not being absolute' that's not the topic in the slightest. As I'm the OP here, I'd kindly ask you to keep to my original statement, or step off and create your own thread.
3. The previous thread has no bearing on this thread.

I process information on both the left and right side of my brain; thus, you are correct in saying my answer is one of philosophy and science. It would be excessively complex; however, my resolution couldn't be tested by any current system. My answer contains literature, history, sciences, and religion.


What the ****?

_EW_
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 6:54 PM
#87
Let me pose a question to you, Achilles. Have you ever considered that, throughout this entire debate, your styles and etiquettes of debating might not be correct?"Correct" compared to what?

That you may be wrong in how you are approaching this entire discussion, and that, as a human being, you've made a mistake, and that your reasoning, logic, and concepts of what is real, and what isn't real, could be incorrect?Of course it is possible. The question is: why would I think so?

Logically inconsistent argument that eat themselves upon arrival aren't going to give me pause, let alone cause me to second guess my position.

They could be correct, but don't they have the possibility of being incorrect?And how would we determine "correctness" vs. "incorrectness"? Via reason? And if I found my arguments to be reasonable and you failed to produce any arguments that would make me think otherwise, which of us would be closer to "correct"?

And that the labels, concepts, and absolutes your laying down might not be true, because they might not be real, and your mind is convincing you that a figment of your imagination is, in fact, real?Sophism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophists)

That just because someone else confirms what you believe is real doesn't mean that it couldn't be due to a form of mass-suggestion, or something to that effect?And then what? Since gravity could be my mind playing tricks on me, I might as well just walk off the side of a building? How far are you willing to take your own example. I believe Avery offered another earlier involving a plastic bag.

Are you absolutely sure that the bird exists, and is black?No. It's the Matrix telling me that the steak is thick and juicy. You win.

Are you positively sure? Can you tell me that you have never been wrong about anything, and cannot be wrong about anything, so, by logical conclusion, absolutely cannot be wrong about this?I hate answering questions with questions, but...

Have you ever confused a bird for a doorknob? Ever accidentally mistaken the color pink for the sound of fingernails on a chalkboard?

What kind of special qualification do you believe are necessary to be able to look at an organism and be able to determine it's species and color?

I highly, HIGHLY doubt it. And that's what this is really about. Nobody can know absolutes,Your statement is an absolute and your are claiming to know it. *poof* your argument eats itself again. You fail. Sorry.

and even my saying that, my saying everything I have said in this thread, just as everything you have said in this thread, is possibly wrong. And possibly right.Yes, that's very deep. I'm very impressed with how enlightened you are. Good job.

But we can't really know. So we speculate, and that's as much as we can do.I'll be more than happy to PM you some things you can try at home to test this world-view of yours. Just let me know if you're interested.
 Adavardes
01-06-2009, 6:57 PM
#88
It's like trying to talk to a brick wall. :rolleyes:
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 6:59 PM
#89
You have no idea.
 Det. Bart Lasiter
01-06-2009, 7:15 PM
#90
It's like trying to talk to a brick wall. :rolleyes:how can you be sure the brick wall exists?
 Q
01-06-2009, 7:36 PM
#91
It's like trying to talk to a brick wall. :rolleyes:
I can assure you that if Achilles is wrong and knows it, he admits it. He's just very rarely wrong, and he is not wrong in this case. ;)
how can you be sure the brick wall exists?
:rofl:
I think I just wet myself.
 Achilles
01-06-2009, 7:37 PM
#92
It's not possible since you can't prove "wet" really exists. PROVE ME WRONG!
 Adavardes
01-06-2009, 7:52 PM
#93
I can assure you that if Achilles is wrong and knows it, he admits it. He's just very rarely wrong, and he is not wrong in this case.;)

Sure.
 Jae Onasi
01-06-2009, 8:40 PM
#94
We have received no less than 8 reports on this thread in the last 48 hours. Time for a break while jonathan7 and I deal with all this crap.
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