Bodhi Dharma Zen
Advaitin
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2004
- Messages
- 3,926
Another problem with this discussion is that some of us are taking "right" and "wrong" in the sense of true vs false (or factual vs non-factual). Some are taking it for moral value (like good vs bad or moral vs immoral).
You are correct. Im talking about true and false statements, like making reflections about a theory of truth.
The consensus is irrelevant to the truth-value of a proposition. I'd make the same assertion even in matters of taste or morality.
Is it? When the earth was considered flat, why would my opinion about it being flat would be considered false? Furthermore, why would my opinion about it being round would be truth?
I'm not so certain what you're talking about here. Can evidence change? Or do you mean more evidence comes to light that points a different direction (in which case the first evidence wasn't entirely probative)? Or maybe we were mistaken about the evidence (mismeasurement perhaps)? I dunno.
Flat earth, gravity as a force, the list goes on. Note that Im not discussing the utility of the theoretical approaches, just its underlying ontological assumptions.
This is also ambiguous (i.e. there are two ways your question can be taken). Obviously the conclusion taken for itself is correct if it's proven correct. But "am I right?" might be a question about methodology (like "is my thinking right?") In that case, you could be wrong even though your conclusion is correct.
Take my example about market analysts above. This is also a way to understand the way woos think. They "confirm" what they believe if a bad induction is made and the results "confirm" their expectatives. How can they be sure about the methodology they are using?
I never could understand the meaning of 4) unless you take the word "rationale" to mean an independent statement. (Obviously if it fails to prove the first statement, it can't be considered a good rationale for it.)
The good old circularity of our language?