fromderinside
Mazzie Daius
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2008
- Messages
- 15,945
- Basic Beliefs
- optimist
Do you think that uploading a video is working on a computer? It pushing the start button on a car working on a car? Don't think so.
Not really. When taken in context with your bleat that a motorcycle mechanic can easily prove their expertise without defining appropriate environiment for demonstrating such proof it is perfectly adequate.
Not really. When taken in context with your bleat that a motorcycle mechanic can easily prove their expertise without defining appropriate environiment for demonstrating such proof it is perfectly adequate.
But you forgot to say he had to do it on the planet Earth.
How stupid!
Not really. When taken in context with your bleat that a motorcycle mechanic can easily prove their expertise without defining appropriate environiment for demonstrating such proof it is perfectly adequate.
But you forgot to say he had to do it on the planet Earth.
How stupid!
Actually, and not ironically at all, the only difference between, say, the mechanic and the philosopher is Dunning Kruger. Both fixing a motor and writing philosophy have very clear constraints, rules and criteria for success. However, in the case of the mechanic there are non technical criteria for success which can be appreciated by the layman without being understood. In the case of philosophy, there is a significant technical training that needs to be undertaken before one can either do or judge philosophy. As such a non mechanic can judge a repair job by the performance of the vehicle. To a non philosopher there is little appreciable difference between well evidenced and reasoned argument and plausible bullshit. So really all you are telling everyone is that you have no training in critical thinking and thus can't tell the difference.
Actually, and not ironically at all, the only difference between, say, the mechanic and the philosopher is Dunning Kruger. Both fixing a motor and writing philosophy have very clear constraints, rules and criteria for success. However, in the case of the mechanic there are non technical criteria for success which can be appreciated by the layman without being understood. In the case of philosophy, there is a significant technical training that needs to be undertaken before one can either do or judge philosophy. As such a non mechanic can judge a repair job by the performance of the vehicle. To a non philosopher there is little appreciable difference between well evidenced and reasoned argument and plausible bullshit. So really all you are telling everyone is that you have no training in critical thinking and thus can't tell the difference.
The constraints of philosophy are capricious arbitrary and an illusion.
No such constraints actually exist.
Constraints do exist in narrow minds.
Actually, and not ironically at all, the only difference between, say, the mechanic and the philosopher is Dunning Kruger. Both fixing a motor and writing philosophy have very clear constraints, rules and criteria for success. However, in the case of the mechanic there are non technical criteria for success which can be appreciated by the layman without being understood. In the case of philosophy, there is a significant technical training that needs to be undertaken before one can either do or judge philosophy. As such a non mechanic can judge a repair job by the performance of the vehicle. To a non philosopher there is little appreciable difference between well evidenced and reasoned argument and plausible bullshit. So really all you are telling everyone is that you have no training in critical thinking and thus can't tell the difference.
The constraints of philosophy are capricious arbitrary and an illusion.
No such constraints actually exist.
Constraints do exist in narrow minds.
The constraint of philosophy is the discipline of logic. Bare assertion, sprinkled with insults, doesn't cut it.
The constraint of philosophy is the discipline of logic. Bare assertion, sprinkled with insults, doesn't cut it.
You have nothing but a bare assertion.
Good little boy.
Don't post any ideas.
You have been shown to be a fool too many times when you do that.
Just stick your tongue out and drool.
Like playing chess with a pigeon.
The constraint of philosophy is the discipline of logic. Bare assertion, sprinkled with insults, doesn't cut it.
You have nothing but a bare assertion.
The constraint of philosophy is the discipline of logic. Bare assertion, sprinkled with insults, doesn't cut it.
You have nothing but a bare assertion.
Actually, I assumed it was common knowledge and you'd just need reminding. My bad. Is it logic you don't believe in, or the assertion that philosophers are constrained by it?
Logic is the only way of moving from true premises to true conclusions. It's a way of preserving a truth value across an argument and allows those who have been trained in it to think, write and evaluate more clearly. I'd rather assume that's enough.
Like playing chess with a pigeon.
That would be your test for a philosopher?
Might tell us something?

Yes. Stick the tongue out.
It is all you are capable of doing.
What could a philosopher prove about their expertise?
What would be their test?
Who would decide if they passed or failed?
The mechanic needs nobody to tell them if they passed.

Actually, I assumed it was common knowledge and you'd just need reminding. My bad. Is it logic you don't believe in, or the assertion that philosophers are constrained by it?
Logic is the only way of moving from true premises to true conclusions. It's a way of preserving a truth value across an argument and allows those who have been trained in it to think, write and evaluate more clearly. I'd rather assume that's enough.
I believe that when humans invent games they invent rules for the games.
Yes there are rules to the game called "logic" some people play.
Logic is a game like football or Old Maid or Go Fish.
It can be played over and over without end.
Is football a constraint on sports?