Changing someone's mind is very difficult, that's why I like puzzles most people get wrong: to try to open their mind. Challenging the claim that 2+2
is unequivocally 4
is one of my favorites to get people to reconsider what they think is true with 100% certainty.
2+2 = not what you think
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I accepted that my mind cannot be changed on a proven statement. This naturally excludes the possibility of a convincing argument. But in the general case, my mind can be changed.
No, it remains to convince you that X is false.
If there was a person willing to engage in open debate who I had a chance to convince, sadly there's none. There is no point in debate if one side is completely closed off.
I'm willing to engage in open debate with you, and your chance to convince me depends on the correctness of your position. You can't expect to convince anyone if you don't have a point. An open mind does not require me to ignore knowledge I have.*
If you refuse to talk further when you turn out to be wrong, you will never learn anything.
*And you don't see it, but I did some research to verify my position before responding. Do you insist Russell should doubt 1+1=2 after writing PM?
And if you make a new argument, I will do more research to refute it.
And who decides the correctness of my position? You. So in order for me to be able to convince you that
X
may be true, I first have to convince you thatX
may be true, butX
cannot be true, because you have decided that the position thatX
may be true is not correct, why? BecauseX
cannot be true.How is this not the definition of circular reasoning?
The correctness of your position is a matter of fact. No one decides it, we research it. I have done so and found out it's not correct. If I happened to be wrong about that, there would be convincing counterarguments you could make, proving me wrong. But I notice you're not even trying to argue X anymore.
It's the definition of a strawman. I have not made the circle of reasoning you describe. I have proven that X is not true, separately.
According to you.
So, according to you, math is a matter of opinion?
Math is not a mater of opinion, what math says is a matter of opinion.
No, math is abstract truth. If the application ever becomes an issue, you're looking to apply math to another field.
In any case, the statement in question is a straightforward arithmetic equation. There's no room for interpretation here.
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