02-02-2007, 06:02 PM | #511 |
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Well, Zak, the real problem is, you aren't defending Rene Descartes, so much as you're defending some half-assed convulated version of his philosophical meandering.
You see, you're being too broad. We begin, merely, with the assumption that reality is real. That's it. Now, when making logical deductions ABOUT reality, that assumption shouldn't even really be considered. I mean, if you assume reality isn't real then there's no point trying to figure out how reality works, now is there? Remember: Descartes said "I think, therefore I am." Meaning, entirely, that he could only prove that HE exists, because he knows that he is thinking. He doesn't know that you're thinking, or that I'm thinking. He only knows that his senses TELL him that other people are there. However, he said, too, that his senses are falliable. So, really, what you're arguing is that the real world doesn't exist and we all live in some dreamland. And, yes, fine, that's a decent idea, that cannot be falsified. We DO have to assume the other. What you're leaving out of your arguement is that if we assume reality is not real, then there's no point discussing anything even tangentially pertaining to reality. And, FURTHER, that it does not mean that anything else we say is an assumption. Every logical construct in science can be thought to have the prefix to it "In the context of believing that reality actually exists" for if reality actually exists then, well, it exists in the manner that we have measured.
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02-02-2007, 06:03 PM | #512 | |
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To go back to the tree thing. If a tree falls in the forest it makes a sound regardless of who is or is not around it. It makes a very loud crashing sound in fact. Even if an insane person happened to be standing there and heard music instead the basic physical effects of the sound are not changed by that. In continuance, how we observe the world, and any flaws there of, effect only those arbitrary names we have for things not the things themselves. This is very easy to prove. Just click off your lights everything looks a lot less colorful in dimmer light. The pigments didn't change. The wavelengths of light that are reflected and absorbed are exactly the same. The only difference is that the receptors in your eyes that work best in low light suck at color. To reiterate, HUMAN OBSERVATIONS NO MATTER HOW FLAWED, DETAILED, ECT HAVE NO IMPACT ON ACTUAL REALITY. Units are simply arbitrary constants that adjust for our limited ability to sense. They act as a translator from objective fact to subjective fact. For better or worse they fix the imperfection of our senses. If our senses where imperfect in a different way or suddenly became imperfect in a different way our units would simply change, or be changed to accommodate that. So, you need not make the assumption that our senses are not flawed if you realize are measurements are in and of themselves meaningless. They are simply translations of the objective truth so that we may understand and communicate that truth. Once more, OUR SENSES BEING FLAWED HAVE NO EFFECT ON THE TRUTH OF ANYTHING; THAT INCLUDES THE MEASUREMENTS WE MAKE. This is because we define our measurements as, for lack of a better way to explain it, the difference between totally objective truth and our perception of that truth. This means that any change in the flaw is immediately accompanied by a change in the definition of the unit of measure preserving the truth of the measurement. Therefore we need not ever concern ourselves with this unknowable perfectly objective truth because our subjective view point continuously shifts to accurately represent it in the way best fit for our understanding. I pull from a wiki: Deductive reasoning is the kind of reasoning in which the conclusion is necessitated by, or reached from, previously known facts (the premises). If the premises are true, the conclusion must be true. This is distinguished from abductive and inductive reasoning, where the premises may predict a high probability of the conclusion, but do not ensure that the conclusion is true. Facts being: act Pronunciation (fkt) n. 1. Knowledge or information based on real occurrences: an account based on fact; a blur of fact and fancy. 2. a. Something demonstrated to exist or known to have existed: Genetic engineering is now a fact. That Chaucer was a real person is an undisputed fact. b. A real occurrence; an event: had to prove the facts of the case. c. Something believed to be true or real: a document laced with mistaken facts. 3. A thing that has been done, especially a crime: an accessory before the fact. 4. Law The aspect of a case at law comprising events determined by evidence: The jury made a finding of fact. Induction or inductive reasoning, sometimes called inductive logic, is the process of reasoning in which the premises of an argument are believed to support the conclusion but do not ensure it. It is used to ascribe properties or relations to types based on tokens (i.e., on one or a small number of observations or experiences); or to formulate laws based on limited observations of recurring phenomenal patterns. Induction is used, for example, in using specific propositions such as: and if you really want to get complex: Abduction, or inference to the best explanation, is a method of reasoning employed in the sciences in which one chooses which hypothesis would, if true, best explain the relevant evidence. In other words, it is the reasoning process that starts from a set of facts and derives their most likely explanations. The term abduction is sometimes used to mean just the generation of hypotheses to explain observations or conclusions, but the former definition is more common both in philosophy and computing. |
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02-02-2007, 06:41 PM | #513 | |||||||||||||
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In fact, that whole "questionable senses" thing was just an example, anyway. If you can explain to me what "reality is real" means (as long as it doesn't mean the same as what I've been saying all along), then I'll just use that as my example assumption of necessity. Last edited by ZAKtheGeek; 02-02-2007 at 07:03 PM. |
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02-02-2007, 07:47 PM | #514 | |||||
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Further, you can't misperceive units precisely because units are how we perceive reality. The units we use always represent the difference between our subjective truth and objective truth because we define them in precisely that manner. The distance light travels in a time interval of 1/(299 792 458) of a second never changes no matter how someone might subjectively view a second or the distance the light traveled. Hell take a look at general Relativity; even in the most crazy warped spacetime any measurement of the speed of light gives you the speed of light. Heck even someone outside of that crazy spacetime measure that same speed. (This is assuming no medium changes as that's a different story about how atoms can help or hinder a photon's progress.) Quote:
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02-02-2007, 08:18 PM | #515 | |||||
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-Even falsehoods can imply truths. You're actually inverting the logic, saying that because the implication is true, the premise must be as well. An example of this sort of thinking is, "Because gremlins have painted the sun yellow, it looks yellow. The sun does indeed look yellow. Therefore, gremlins must have painted it yellow." -You are transcending the level of abstraction this issue is based in. Remember, both your premises and their implications are verified through observation. If you can observe a faulty premise, then you can observe a faulty yet matching event for the implication. Quote:
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02-02-2007, 08:58 PM | #516 | ||
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ZAK,
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And here there's a distinction to be made. When you say "everything which we can sense", you're suggesting that it would be foolish to restrain the definition of theoritical reality to what has been already experienced or sensed. But in this context, that's not what observed reality is set up against. You set up, in your example, observed reality against another reality in its place. Observed reality is observed with consistancy. It's true that it could be inconsistant with actual reality, but if it was all of this is moot, so we do start with the assumption that observed reality is reality. To quote Azisien: Quote:
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02-02-2007, 09:05 PM | #517 | |||||||
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[quote=-You are transcending the level of abstraction this issue is based in. Remember, both your premises and their implications are verified through observation. If you can observe a faulty premise, then you can observe a faulty yet matching event for the implication.[/quote] Except not because even if you observe a faulty premise and a faulty observation there is always a way it could and most likely would bite you in the ass. Lets go back to the tree in the forest example. If you happen to be in the path of the tree and high on LCD and you think its a fluffy cloud coming down over you that doesn't prevent you from being crushed and dieing. Further, if while you are dieing your brain maintains the illusion that you are covered in a harmless fluffy cloud you still die. It doesn't change a damn thing. |
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02-02-2007, 09:53 PM | #518 | |||||||||||
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The other way to counter this was kindly provided by Sithdarth. You might see wolves as bunnies, but bunnies are never going to eat you. There's no crap your senses could possibly feed you to cover up the fact that you're dead. |
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02-02-2007, 10:20 PM | #519 | ||||||||
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02-02-2007, 10:52 PM | #520 | |||||||
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Alternatively, see the inconsistent observation concept which I directed at Archbio one post prior. Quote:
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Last edited by ZAKtheGeek; 02-02-2007 at 11:13 PM. |
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