Crocoshark
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Dec 19, 2010
- Messages
- 449
Newbie critique & the line between argument from ignorance & argument from evidence?
Hi, I'm new here.
I'm a sort-of skeptic, a skeptical believer, a semi-skeptic, not quite on your bandwagon but supportive of your cause. I have a soft spot for SOME paranormal claims but wouldn't actually bet money on any of it. I signed up because I wanted to hear skeptics address some thoughts of mine, and I wanted to play a little devil's advocate, offer some skeptical critique of the skeptic movement. So, without further ado . .
I think the two difference between "skeptics" and "non-skeptics" are ultimately the following;
1. Philosophical; I think the difference between the two sides is more philosophical then the arguments themselves would indicate. Skeptics will try to argue their case with science showing homeopathy doesn't work or giving natural explanations to ghost experiences. But the difference runs deeper. I think before skeptics make the empirical arguments about the validity of this or of that, the focus should be on the philosophical debate. The "skeptic movement" seems to be a rationalist/philosophical naturalist one, and not everyone believes that scientific evidence is or should be the exclusive means to explain the world. Case in point; the many religious people who freely admit their beliefs are completely irrational, but disagree with the position that anything irrational should be disregarded.
To me, "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" is just as much if not more a fact of psychology than epistemology. "Extraordinary claim" is defined as something that, if true, would change drastically the paradigm with which "we" view the world. But different people have different paradigms. While gods are extraordinary to many of you, and to me as well, to the theist, the idea that all this emerged without a divine guidance is extraordinary, and require extraordinary evidence before they believe it, just like any skeptic.
2. The difference between "skeptics" and "non-skeptics" is a sliding scale; where the non-skeptic's investigation ends (wikipedia
), the skeptic's search has only just begun. Some skeptics might say something along the lines of "Cryptozoologists/creationists/conspiracy theorist/whatever believe based on ignorance whereas a skeptic only believes something based on evidence", but to many the presence of footprint casts, the eye, experiences of divine revelation, anomalies and "red flags" in historic events prove the sasquatch/ID/god/conspiracy. This seems like a really captainobvious statement, I know. But is proof defined as something that leaves no other possibility but one conclusion?
If so, aren't even strong evidence-based conclusions based on "How else could it be logically explained?" or some variation of that statement, like "This is true because I can't imagine how it could reasonably be anything otherwise"?
The conspiracy theorist tries to "prove" his theory with "how else do you explain this weird thing and that weird thing?" and "X is the only thing I can think of to explain it, therefore it does." These may be arguments from ignorance or arguments from lack of imagination, but couldn't scientific conclusions be described as "arguments from less ignorance" and "arguments from less lack of imagination". It seems like a sliding scale, so what of the line between satisfactory and unsatisfactory evidence. Is it a fine line? Is it fuzzy? How do I best identify it in the case of conspiracy theories and alternative medicine?
Finally, how are things in other galaxies like gamma ray bursts and black holes proven by the scientific method? Don't these things only have photos and recordings of anomalies?
Hi, I'm new here.
I think the two difference between "skeptics" and "non-skeptics" are ultimately the following;
1. Philosophical; I think the difference between the two sides is more philosophical then the arguments themselves would indicate. Skeptics will try to argue their case with science showing homeopathy doesn't work or giving natural explanations to ghost experiences. But the difference runs deeper. I think before skeptics make the empirical arguments about the validity of this or of that, the focus should be on the philosophical debate. The "skeptic movement" seems to be a rationalist/philosophical naturalist one, and not everyone believes that scientific evidence is or should be the exclusive means to explain the world. Case in point; the many religious people who freely admit their beliefs are completely irrational, but disagree with the position that anything irrational should be disregarded.
To me, "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" is just as much if not more a fact of psychology than epistemology. "Extraordinary claim" is defined as something that, if true, would change drastically the paradigm with which "we" view the world. But different people have different paradigms. While gods are extraordinary to many of you, and to me as well, to the theist, the idea that all this emerged without a divine guidance is extraordinary, and require extraordinary evidence before they believe it, just like any skeptic.
2. The difference between "skeptics" and "non-skeptics" is a sliding scale; where the non-skeptic's investigation ends (wikipedia
If so, aren't even strong evidence-based conclusions based on "How else could it be logically explained?" or some variation of that statement, like "This is true because I can't imagine how it could reasonably be anything otherwise"?
The conspiracy theorist tries to "prove" his theory with "how else do you explain this weird thing and that weird thing?" and "X is the only thing I can think of to explain it, therefore it does." These may be arguments from ignorance or arguments from lack of imagination, but couldn't scientific conclusions be described as "arguments from less ignorance" and "arguments from less lack of imagination". It seems like a sliding scale, so what of the line between satisfactory and unsatisfactory evidence. Is it a fine line? Is it fuzzy? How do I best identify it in the case of conspiracy theories and alternative medicine?
Finally, how are things in other galaxies like gamma ray bursts and black holes proven by the scientific method? Don't these things only have photos and recordings of anomalies?
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