▲ | N2yhWNXQN3k9 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> or we would not be having this discussion. Or those who aren't students of philosophy, just never read everything they said, seems more likely, no? > Keep in mind the philosophers who came before had great contributions to the big thought-experiment we call existence, but many of them argued from emotionally or socioeconomically tainted positions and nobody has gotten it 100% right yet, or we would not be having this discussion. Okay? What does that mean? We have 300 years of society embracing this perspective of Hume and the (at least) tens of thousands of scholars that followed him. I think it is well established that we believe this, even if you have some special knowledge or something enqueued. Are you going to debunk all philosophy of the 18th century because they were arguing from an "emotionally or socioeconomically" stance (whatever that means)? It seems like an argument from an extremely weak position rhetorically, and I am being generous. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | 0xEF 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Your replies indicate that you are not able to have this discussion as you are too steeped in your field of study, which I assume you consider to be objectively correct. I respect the time and effort you've put into it, but Philosophy, though useful at times, is conjecture, not science. It does not have a place in a discussion about the inherent truth of measurable natural phenomenon if one is not able to cast doubt on it. I shall move on. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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