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It never ceases to amaze me how quick people are to join me in radical skepticism if their assumptions are pressed. But surely if you hold to such high standards you must know that nothing at all can be proven, right? As Pyrro, you must realize in the wisdom of this logic that knowledge is impossible. Because it ultimately always could be that what has been deemed true could be invalidated, and that forever remains this possibility. Therefore the default assumption should be that we don't know that anything is true.
But then, let's assume for practical purposes that we're not stabbing at the truth but at a practical empirical model that would allow us to make predictions. One that holds to, among other principles, parsimony.
Would you agree that such a model must consider all negative claims to be false by default?
I'm not jumping to radical skepticism because my assumptions are pressed, the person I was responding to was making a positive claim without proof. I think I can have my own assumptions and also note the lack of evidence being offered by the other person.
I think Phoebe said the same to Ross in Friends at one point when it came to the dinosaurs, but even I understood at that age that Ross should have responded that both of them had an obligation to believe whatever the evidence said at this time. That we might update our knowledge doesn't mean we can't have it, as far as I know.
I don't understand how you wouldn't be approximating truth by doing that.
Incorrect. They were making a negative claim. That is a statement about the nonexistence or exclusion of something. Saying something is impossible is not a positive claim, it is a negative one. By definition.
And Ross would be mistaken, clearly, as being wrong in a context that gave you good reasons to think your error was the truth is still being wrong. At least in the absolute terms we speak of here.
What Ross should have said is that this is our best approximation of the truth. And that operating under one's best guess is reasonable.
Oh but it does mean just that. What you think is knowledge isn't knowledge. It's a model. The map is not the territory.
You would, but there is no other possible thing you can do.
Okay, fine. They were making a claim without evidence. There you go. I don't know what the point of this philosophical discussion is, it seems to be fairly trivial.
The point is that you seem to have variable geometry skepticism and it's not a coherent position to hold.
Making negative claims without evidence is perfectly rational in an empiricist framework. The burden of evidence is on positive claims.
As you would have Ross say it is your duty to believe that things are impossible lest they have been demonstrated to be possible. And one doesn't get to escape this just because the belief is inconvenient.
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