Showing posts sorted by relevance for query SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018). Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018). Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Logical positivism

Photo: IMG_20191025_1738594 

Logical positivism 

SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018) The Little Book of Philosophy, Landau Cecile (Ed), London, DK Publishing.


Preface

I received my first COVID-19 vaccination today, the Moderna vaccine. My body has not reacted much at all. I suppose after my several 'bionic eye' injections with the 27 gauge needle, my body 'figures' the tiny Moderna needle and injection are not even worth reacting to...

SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018) The Little Book of Philosophy, Landau Cecile (Ed), London, DK Publishing.

Rudolph Carnap

Note the different titles for similar works translated from German to English. The text under review is compiling the information and I am adding as many relevant references as my research finds.

In The Modern World section there is an entry entitled Logic is the scientific ingredient of philosophy. (155)

Logic is the scientific ingredient of philosophy is quoted from Rudolph Carnap (1891-1970). (155)

Rudolf Carnap (1891-1970), AustrianAmerican philosopher. trans. by Max Black, K. Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co. (1934). Unity of Science, p. 22.


Cited 

[LSS] 1934a [1937], Logische Syntax der Sprache, Vienna: Springer. Translated by Amethe Smeaton as The Logical Syntax of Language, London: Routledge, 1937.

1934b, “Theoretische Fragen und praktische Entscheidungen”, Natur und Geist, 2: 257–260. 

1934c [1987], Die Aufgabe der Wissenschaftslogik, Vienna: Gerold. Translated as “The Task of the Logic of Science”, Hans Kaal (trans.), in Unified Science, Rainer Hegselmann and Brian McGuinness (eds.), Dordrecht: Reidel, 1987, 46–66. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-3865-6_3 

1934d [2004], “On the Character of Philosophic Problems”, W. M. Malisoff (trans.), Philosophy of Science, 1(1): 5–19. German original “Über den Charakter philosophischer Probleme” published in R. Carnap Scheinprobleme in der Philosophie und andere metaphysikkritische Schriften, T. Mormann (ed.), Hamburg: Meiner, 2004, 111–127. doi:10.1086/286302 (en)
---

The Little Book of Philosophy continues...

The German born Carnap in 'The Philosophical Language as the Universal Language of Science (1934)', suggests that philosophy's proper function, and its primary contribution to science is analysis and clarification of scientific concepts and ideas. (155).

Carnap reasoned that metaphysical issues were meaningless because the metaphysical cannot be proved empirically. (155). The text then explains that 'logical positivism'  accepts only empirical statements as true. (155).

archives search positivism 

Blackburn writes that within philosophy this view holds that the highest or only form of knowledge can be known through sensory perception. This is a version of empiricism. It focuses on optimism from the hopes of science and originated in the 19th century and relates to evolutionary and naturalist theory. Blackburn (1996: 294). 

Bryman explains that within social research and statistics, positivism advocates the use of methods of natural sciences for the study of social reality and beyond. This concept can include only knowledge confirmed by the senses. Bryman (2004: 11). Logical positivism, which is also known as logical empiricism, accepts empiricism, but also allows for the power of formal logic to describe the structures of permissible inferences. Blackburn (1996: 223). 

Richard A. Fumerton notes that some positivists have allowed for the idea that a proposition can be meaningful if it is likely to be true. Fumerton (1996: 445-446). Fumerton presents that a strict positivism leads to a rejection of religious and moral philosophy. Fumerton (1996: 445). 

A view that combines the need for empiricism as a method of finding truth and allows for non-empirical rational philosophical propositions that are also considered a form of truth, because the rational philosophical propositions are logical and cannot be reasonably contrasted by superior counter propositions, would be a view that would work with a Christian worldview. 

Perhaps a more adaptable form of logical positivism could offer this reasonable compromise position between empirical science and related views and philosophy of religion and theology. 

Rationalism is the view that unaided reason can be used in finding knowledge without the use of sense perception. Blackburn (1996: 318). 

Christian theology uses philosophical reasoning, and a priori knowledge in deducing the existence of God, and this could be considered a form of rationalism and some logical positivists could accept rationalism in conjunction with an acceptance of empirical science. A priori knowledge can be known without the use of sensory experience in the course of events in reality. Blackburn (1999: 21). 

A posteriori knowledge can be known through the use of some sensory experience, and if something is knowable A posteriori it cannot be known A priori according to Blackburn. Blackburn (1996: 21). 

John Kent states positivism is a philosophical position belonging to the empirical view according to which humankind can have no knowledge of anything but phenomena, and that is only what is apprehended by the senses empirically. Kent (1999: 454). The concept would be that positive knowledge is associated in particular with the sciences as in things must be observed and there is no questioning of knowledge beyond. Kent (1999: 454). Therefore other fields such as theology and metaphysics would be regarded as speculation. Kent (1999: 454). 

The term 'positivism' was introduced by French socialist Saint-Simon (1760-1825) and noted by his student Auguste Comte (1798-1857). Comte held that the highest or only form of knowledge is the description of sensory phenomena. Blackburn (1996: 294). This being the empirical. He held to three stages of human belief the theological, the metaphysical and the positive. It is a version of traditional empiricism. Blackburn (1996: 294). 

BLACKBURN, SIMON (1996) Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, Oxford, Oxford University Press. 

BRYMAN, ALAN (2004) Social Research Methods, Oxford, Oxford University Press. 

FUMERTON, RICHARD A. (1996) ‘Logical Positivism’ in Robert Audi (ed.), The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

KANT, IMMANUEL (1781)(1787)(1998) Critique of Pure Reason, Translated and edited by Paul Guyer and Allen W. Wood, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 

KANT, IMMANUEL (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006) Critique of Pure Reason, Translated by Norman Kemp Smith, London, Macmillan. 

KANT, IMMANUEL (1788)(1997) Critique of Practical Reason, Translated by Mary Gregor (ed.), Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 

KANT, IMMANUEL (1788)(1898)(2006) The Critique of Practical Reason, Translated by Thomas Kingsmill Abbott, London, Longmans, Green, and Co. 

KANT, IMMANUEL (1791)(2001) ‘On The Miscarriage of All Philosophical Trials in Theodicy’, in Religion and Rational Theology, Translated by George di Giovanni and Allen Wood, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. 

KENT, JOHN (1999) ‘Positivism’, in Alan Richardson and John Bowden (eds.), New Dictionary of Christian Theology, Kent, SCM Press Ltd. 

WEIRICH, PAUL. (1996) ‘Comte, Auguste’, in Robert Audi (ed.), The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

encyclopedia.com 

Cited 

The periodicals edited by Saint-Simon, L’industrie (1816–1818), Le politique (1819), L’organisateur (1819–1820), and Du systeme industriel (1821–1822), are often catalogued by libraries under Saint-Simon’s name. Manuel 1962 describes them as appearing intermittently, in part to evade the rules of censorship applied to serial publications, but chiefly because Saint-Simon found it difficult to raise the money necessary to publish them.

1807 Introduction aux travaux scientifiques du dix-neu-vième siècle. Paris: Scherff. 

(1813a) 1876 Memoire sur la science de l’homme. Volume 40 of Oeuvres de Saint-Simon et d’Enfantin. Paris: Dentu. 

1813b Travail sur la gravitation universelle. Paris. → No publisher given. 

(1825) 1952 New Christianity: Dialogue. Pages 81-116 in Saint-Simon, Selected Writings. Edited and translated by F. M. H. Markham. Oxford: Blackwell. → First published in French. A new French edition was published in 1943 by Aubry. 

Henri de Saint-Simon: Social Organization. New York: Harper, 1964. → Also published in 1952 by Macmillan under the title Henri de Saint-Simon: Selected Writings. 

Oeuvres de Claude-Henri de Saint-Simon. 6 vols. Paris: Éditions Anthropos, 1966. → Volumes 1-5 reprinted from Oeuvres de Saint-Simon et d’Enfantin, 1865— 1878. Volume 6 reprinted from other works. 

Oeuvres de Saint-Simon et d’Enfantin. 47 vols. Paris: Dentu, 1865–1878. → Saint-Simon’s writings are in Volumes 15, 18-23, and 37-40. 

Selected Writings. Edited and translated with an introduction by F. M. H. Markham. Oxford: Blackwell, 1952.

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Auguste Comte First published Wed Oct 1, 2008; substantive revision Tue May 8, 2018: Bibliography

Wednesday, March 03, 2021

Reply to tikno

Reply to tikno

Photo: Shenandoah National Park, Virginia, February 2021, Facebook 

Preface



I replied to tinko's comments.

tinko: link provided


Cited

Maybe this post can be used as a reflections of how you deal with logic and faith (unlogic). After that, let people know of what you think. Just see how you react to this post.If you're very religious people (almost fanatic) then I guess your reaction will be very different to those who think more logical in response to various occurrence in these universe or even to your daily life.

Reply

Hi tinko,

Blessings to you and family. There are religious people and non-religious people that can be thinking logically or illogically and use logic or illogic. In every worldview there are ignorant, uneducated persons that do not rely significantly on logic and reason.

Science, Theology, Philosophy of Religion/Philosophy, Biblical Studies, Archaeology, Psychology, Medical Science, Law, Mathematics, are all examples of college and University level academic disciplines that require the use of logic and also reason, to be reasonably, successfully understood to even achieve even a passing grade.

To achieve a degree or level of achievement in any of these academic disciplines requires the significant use of both logic and reason. 

As only God is infinite, only God has infinite knowledge. As all things created, and all rational entities are finite, there is an aspect of faith with knowledge for human beings in each and every worldview, religious or not. 

Human beings and all angelic beings, angelic/demonic would be finite. To disobey God, and therefore oppose God through a corrupt nature, consciousness, desires, will, acts/actions is not just the difference between being positive and negative. It is sin (Genesis 1-3, Romans 1-6, Galatians, Ephesians 1-2, Hebrews) as examples. There is no salvation for fallen angels, but there is salvation for those that through regeneration (John 3, Titus 3) trust in the applied, salvific, atoning and resurrection work of Jesus Christ.

To quote you tikno

At least that's my personal understanding as ordinary people.

I appreciate the humility. I am ordinary and average in many ways. But, by God's grace and by God's will, I have been able research, write, edit and revise within certain, often difficult, academic disciplines. Here are some links for you to ponder on and some citations: 

Scientism


Cited 

Scientism 

Blackburn: Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy 

Scientism: A pejorative term for the concept that only the methods of natural science and related categories form the elements for any philosophical or other enquiry. Blackburn (1996: 344). 

From The Concise Oxford Dictionary 

Scientism: 1 a a method or doctrine regarded as characteristic of scientists b the use of practice of this. 2 often derogatory, an excessive belief in or application of scientific method. Oxford (1995: 1236). 

Oxford Science 

Empiricism: 'Denotes a result that is observed by experiment or observation rather than by theory.' (287). I view empiricism as a legitimate academic approach in reasonable contexts, but academia overall, does also require the use of philosophical approaches to gain knowledge and truth.

Immanuel Kant

SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018) The Little Book of Philosophy, Landau Cecile (Ed), London, DK Publishing

The text under review (SZUDEK) explains that Kant argues that empiricism and scientific knowledge provides vital answers but is not 'the whole answer' (104). The text explains: 'That a true empiricist would argue against Kant that all acquaintances come from experience, in other words, nothing is apriori.' (104-105). The idea of God creating the world, is an apriori concept. (105).

The Nature of God



First Cause: Philosophy of Religion &Theology

Even if the Hebrew Bible and New Testament documents could be proven historically false (not my academic or personal, position), this in my mind would in no way by default demonstrate the likelihood of secularism, atheism or agnosticism as correct views. 

First cause is a major philosophical problem. As matter is time, space, finite and cannot be their own cause as this would cause a vicious regress, it requires a cause beyond matter and time and space, which are also finite. As example, one also cannot have a vicious regress of time or the present time would never be arrived. A vicious regress never solves its own problem...(logical or not). 

Philosophical arguments for first cause do not prove the existence of the Biblical God but can serve as parallel truth to the creation story of Genesis 1. I use arguments for God being philosophically and theologically the first cause and this parallels the Genesis (1-3) creation account without being explicitly biblical. Deism or a related theism, in my mind is a far more likely alternative to Christianity than a non-theistic view, although I fully believe in the Biblical texts. 

Although Deism, and related theisms, do not accept a God that reveals self it still accepts the God of first cause. First cause provides premises which prove, philosophically and theologically, in a sense, the existence of God. 

God: Biblical Studies & Theology

It is also Biblical and reasonable to deduce that God creates human beings with certain innate understanding of reality that will be assisted by experience. 

Romans 1:19 explains that God made human beings with a natural understanding of his existence. Perhaps this would be a priori knowledge and would not exist entirely on human presuppositions. The existence of natural knowledge of God does not necessarily mean that human beings worship or obey God. 

18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth [a]in unrighteousness, 19 because that which is known about God is evident [b]within them; for God made it evident to them. 20 For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that they are without excuse. Footnotes: Romans 1:18 Or by Romans 1:19 Or among 

Within a biblical Christian worldview and Christian theology, the Scripture is legitimate, well-documented with manuscript evidence, religious history. God through Jesus Christ has revealed himself to finite humanity in an effective, limited, empirical fashion, and this would be considered a posteriori knowledge of God, although God as pure spirit remains beyond the physical senses as a priori. 

Jesus Christ as God’s key supernatural representative (yet God-man), was preceded by Hebrew Bible, prophets and writers and John the Baptist in the New Testament, and followed by the disciples of Jesus Christ and the apostles and scribes in the New Testament era. Post-New Testament era, followed by the Church Fathers, forward. The Scripture provides religious history, via supernatural and human sources, which in a sense, proves the existence of God. 

Logic


A main text used

LANGER, SUSANNE K (1953)(1967) An Introduction to Symbolic Logic, Dover Publications, New York. (Philosophy).

Fallacies


A main text used

PIRIE, MADSEN (2006)(2015) How To Win Every Argument, Bloomsbury, London. 
---

AMERIKS, KARL (1999) ‘Kant, Immanuel’, in Robert Audi (ed.), The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. 

BLACKBURN, SIMON (1996) Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, Oxford, Oxford University Press. 

BONJOUR, LAURENCE. (1996) ‘A Priori’, in Robert Audi (ed.), The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

EDWARDS, PAUL AND ARTHUR PAP (1973) (eds), ‘A priori knowledge: Introduction’, A Modern Introduction To Philosophy, New York, The Free Press. 

GUYER, PAUL AND ALLEN W, in KANT, IMMANUEL (1781)(1787)(1998) Critique of Pure Reason, Translated and edited by Paul Guyer and Allen W. Wood, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 

HUME, DAVID (1739-1740)(1973) ‘A Treatise of Human Nature’, in Paul Edwards and Arthur Pap (eds.), A Modern Introduction To Philosophy, New York, The Free Press. 

HUME, DAVID (1779)(2004) Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, Digireads.com/Neeland Media LLC, Lawrence, Kansas.

KANT, IMMANUEL (1781)(1787)(1998) Critique of Pure Reason, Translated and edited by Paul Guyer and Allen W. Wood, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 

KANT, IMMANUEL (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006) Critique of Pure Reason, Translated by Norman Kemp Smith, London, Macmillan. http://www.hkbu.edu.hk/~ppp/cpr/toc.html. 

KANT, IMMANUEL (1788)(1997) Critique of Practical Reason, Translated by Mary Gregor (ed.), Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 

KANT, IMMANUEL (1788)(1898)(2006) The Critique of Practical Reason, Translated by Thomas Kingsmill Abbott, London, Longmans, Green, and Co. http://philosophy.eserver.org/kant/critique-of-practical-reaso.txt 

KANT, IMMANUEL (1791)(2001) ‘On The Miscarriage of All Philosophical Trials in Theodicy’, in Religion and Rational Theology, Translated by George di Giovanni and Allen Wood, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. 

OXFORD DICTIONARY OF SCIENCE (2010) Oxford, Oxford University Press. 

PIRIE, MADSEN (2006)(2015) How To Win Every Argument, Bloomsbury, London. 

LANGER, SUSANNE K (1953)(1967) An Introduction to Symbolic Logic, Dover Publications, New York. (Philosophy).

POJMAN, LOUIS P. (1996) Philosophy: The Quest for Truth, New York, Wadsworth Publishing Company. 

SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018) The Little Book of Philosophy, Landau Cecile (Ed), London, DK Publishing

THE CONCISE OXFORD DICTIONARY (1995) Della Thompson (ed.), Oxford, Clarendon Press. 

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Shiny new fallacy?

Shiny new fallacy?

Apple photo

Preface   

PIRIE, MADSEN (2006)(2015) How To Win Every Argument, Bloomsbury, London.

Shiny new fallacy 

It is fallacious to assume age is a guide to correctness. (152). The ad antiquitatem relies on tradition to fallaciously support a claim. (Pirie spells it as ad antiquitam) (152). It is also fallacious to assume that something new is more correct. (152). The argumentum ad novitam is in error because it assumes that newness is a factor in making something correct and sound. (152).

Pirie documents this second fallacy as

Novitam, argumentum ad

Logically fallacious

Cited

'Appeal to Novelty

argumentum ad novitatem (also known as: appeal to the new, ad novitam [sometimes spelled as]) 

Description: Claiming that something that is new or modern is superior to the status quo, based exclusively on its newness.

Logical Form: X has been around for years now. Y is new. Therefore, Y is better than X.'

Cited

References: 

Sternberg, R. J., III, H. L. R., & Halpern, D. F. (2007). Critical Thinking in Psychology. Cambridge University Press.

Related

The first fallacy noted...

Logically fallacious

'Appeal to Tradition argumentum ad antiquitatem (also known as: appeal to common practice, appeal to antiquity, appeal to traditional wisdom, proof from tradition, appeal to past practice, traditional wisdom)."

Therefore, as examples, considering these two fallacies..

It is fallacious to assume progressive ideas are by definition, superior to conservative ideas.

It is fallacious to assume conservative ideas are by definition, superior to progressive ideas.

Premises/propositions leading to conclusions should be evaluated on an individual basis, even while admitting propositions and conclusions are developed within a worldview. This is true within Biblical Studies, Theology, Philosophy/Philosophy of Religion, and within other academic disciplines, and in all forms of reason. Some progressive liberal ideas may be superior to conservative ideas, but ideas should not be assumed to be so without reason and evidence. Some conservative ideas may be superior to progressive ideas, but ideas should not be assumed to be so without reason and evidence. I definately, definitively, strongly, have a worldview more on the moderate conservative side, within a Reformed, Biblical, tradition.

Pirie explains that these two fallacies can conflict. (154). An appeal to the new versus and appeal to the old. As noted this can take place in the form of progressive versus conservative ideas, but admittedly, theoretically, at times, progressive liberal approaches can embrace older ideas and conservatism can embrace newer ideas.

Cited 

References:

Harpine, W. D. (1993). The Appeal to Tradition: Cultural Evolution and Logical Soundness. Informal Logic, 15(3).
---

BLACKBURN, SIMON (1996) Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, Oxford, Oxford University Press. 

CONWAY DAVID A. AND RONALD MUNSON (1997) The Elements of Reasoning, Wadsworth Publishing Company, New York. 

LANGER, SUSANNE K (1953)(1967) An Introduction to Symbolic Logic, Dover Publications, New York. (Philosophy). 

PAPINEAU, DAVID (Gen. Ed) (2016) Philosophy: Theories and Great Thinkers, New York, Shelter Harbour Press. 

PIRIE, MADSEN (2006)(2015) How To Win Every Argument, Bloomsbury, London.

POJMAN, LOUIS P. (1996) Philosophy: The Quest for Truth, New York, Wadsworth Publishing Company.

SAMPLES, KENNETH (2014) How to Evaluate an Abductive Argument, Reasons to Believe, Covina, California. 

SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018) The Little Book of Philosophy, Landau Cecile (Ed), London, DK Publishing.

Monday, August 27, 2018

Slippery slope argument and the ridiculous conclusion that amuses my friend

Today
Slippery slope argument and the ridiculous conclusion that amuses my friend

PIRIE, MADSEN (2006)(2015) How To Win Every Argument, Bloomsbury, London. 

Revisiting the concept of the slippery slope from British philosopher, Pirie.

The fallacy assumes that a single step in a particular direction, inevitably means that the whole distance will be covered. (189).

But, the truth is, sometimes a single step leads to another and there are cases when it does not. (189).

I agree with Pirie where he reasons: 'There is a limited class of cases in which someone is doomed after a first step...' Stepping off a skyscraper being a good philosophical example. (189). Based on the author's example: (189). If we lower the legal drinking age from 21 to 18 years of age, soon there will be a call in society for the legal drinking age to be lowered to 16 years of age. This is unlikely as in the 21st Century, the standard age of adulthood is typically 18 years of age. Therefore, it is doubtful there would be societal calls for the legal age of drinking to be below 'universal' adulthood.

The fallacy fails to differentiate between far-reaching actions and limited actions. (190). The author opines that most proposals would lead to disaster if taken too far. My examples: If one smokes marijuana, it will lead to cocaine use. This is true at times, marijuana being documented as a gateway drug, but it is not always the case in every instance. As it is written it is fallacious. If one smokes marijuana, it may lead to cocaine use. Reasonable. (I have no interest in recreational drugs or in the abuse of pharmaceutical drugs.)

Blackburn reasons that a slippery slope occurs when arguments one has accepted against something, appear to equally apply against one's own position. (353). Perhaps one is forced into considering or accepting a position that one has no desire to accept. (353). But, holding to a certain position on an issue, does not mean that one would hold to an extreme position. Accepting a noise bylaw, would not mean I accept that we should all live in near silence.
---

A good friend and I laugh in regards to comments made from an online pastor in a sermon.

Paraphrased, the idea from the sermon was that the modern Christians trying to be cool, ends up in a slippery slope of degrading moral thoughts, acts and actions. A Christian trying to be cool and relatable to people in the world system, drinks alcohol a bit, gets a tattoo and smokes a little marijuana and soon is hooked on drugs, alcohol and fornication. In other words, the Christian wanting to be cool, ends up living in a very similar way to the non-believer.

To highlight Pirie's view of the slippery slope argument as fallacy, I added, much to the satirical, humourous enjoyment of my good friend, the premise that ultimately this can lead to 'orgies.'

The ridiculousness of this imagined, formulaic, chain of moral thoughts, acts and actions, demonstrates the fallacious nature of the idea of the slippery slope argument.

Being somewhat cool, in a social situation, may include the limited use of alcohol and most moderate drinkers do not end up alcoholics. It is not a slippery slope. It is not universal or even typical.

BLACKBURN, SIMON (1996) Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, Oxford, Oxford University Press.

CONWAY DAVID A. AND RONALD MUNSON (1997) The Elements of Reasoning, Wadsworth Publishing Company, New York.

COURSON, JON (2005) Application Commentary, Thomas Nelson, Nashville.

PIRIE, MADSEN (2006)(2015) How To Win Every Argument, Bloomsbury, London.

LANGER, SUSANNE K (1953)(1967) An Introduction to Symbolic Logic, Dover Publications, New York. (Philosophy). 

PAPINEAU, DAVID (Gen. Ed) (2016) Philosophy: Theories and Great Thinkers, New York, Shelter Harbour Press.

SAMPLES, KENNETH (2014) How to Evaluate an Abductive Argument, Reasons to Believe, Covina, California.

SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018) The Little Book of Philosophy, Landau Cecile (Ed), London, DK Publishing.

WALTON, D.N. (1992) Slippery Slope Arguments, Clarendon Press.
https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/logicalfallacies/Slippery-Slope

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Two new philosophy books

For me that is...

PAPINEAU, DAVID (Gen. Ed) (2016) Philosophy: Theories and Great Thinkers (2016), New York, Shelter Harbour Press.

SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018) The Little Book of Philosophy, Landau Cecile (Ed), London, DK Publishing.

Two new philosophy textbooks as Christmas gifts that I can use for website work.







Thursday, June 15, 2017

Is this nauseating?

Washington, DC
Is this nauseating?

PIRIE, MADSEN (2006)(2015) How To Win Every Argument, Bloomsbury, London.

The review of this philosophy text, continued.

Nauseam, argumentum ad

Simple repetition of a point of view does nothing to provide additional evidence or facts. (147).

My Mother in her earlier days, loved this approach...

'Yet it can erode the critical faculty'.' (147). Things are not more true because they are heard more often. (147).

Based on the author's example: (148).

I have told you three times...!!!

The fact is '...repetition adds nothing to logic.' (148). Fallaciously, psychological factors are appealed to as opposed to logic. (148). Emotion is favoured over reason. A subjective approach used over an objective approach.

Based on the author's example: (148).

To an RCMP officer:

It was not me!
I said, it was not me?
It was not me, for sure!

Out of interest, as with my last Langer, philosophical text review, where she uses socialism in an example, Pirie does here as well. He reasons that this fallacy could be presented with the terms 'Socialism means rule by the workers.' Pirie appears like me, to be of a conservative view. Perhaps in support of his suggestion, it could be stated that socialism exchanges one rule by elites for another rule by elites?

Here in Canada, being governed by the Conservative party is rule by a group of elites. I would reason that being governed by the New Democratic Party, would entail being ruled by another group of elites. Of course with present, media star, Prime Minister Trudeau and his followers of the Liberal Party. we are likely going to be ruled by the Liberal party elites for decades!

What is a reasonable, philosophical, political answer to being ruled by elites? Rule by the people through online referendums? Are enough people in the general public significantly educated with the issues to support reasonable views?

A theoretical referendum proposition:

Should Christian churches that support biblical standards on sexuality and marriage be made illegal in Canada?

This would be a proposition being presented to a Canadian public, largely not educated, within the disciplines of religious studies, philosophy, political science and constitutional law. The results could threaten religious liberty.

Pirie explains that 'political credos' are presented with the use of this fallacy. (148).


Cited: 

'Etymology 

Latin Noun argumentum ad nauseam (rhetoric) 

The false proof of a statement by (prolonged) repetition, possibly by different people.'

A twisted crown of thorns.com:  I think not...
BLACKBURN, SIMON (1996) Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, Oxford, Oxford University Press. 

CONWAY DAVID A. AND RONALD MUNSON (1997) The Elements of Reasoning, Wadsworth Publishing Company, New York. 

LANGER, SUSANNE K (1953)(1967) An Introduction to Symbolic Logic, Dover Publications, New York. 

PAPINEAU, DAVID (Gen. Ed) (2016) Philosophy: Theories and Great Thinkers, New York, Shelter Harbour Press. 

PIRIE, MADSEN (2006)(2015) How To Win Every Argument, Bloomsbury, London. 

SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018) The Little Book of Philosophy, Landau Cecile (Ed), London, DK Publishing.



Tuesday, December 29, 2020

A Little Philosophy: Kant

A Little Philosophy: Kant 

SZUDEK, ANDY & TORSLEY, SARAH (2018) The Little Book of Philosophy, Landau Cecile (Ed), London, DK Publishing. 

Preface

'Kant wants to demonstrate that there is an external, material world, and that its existence cannot be denied.' (102). 

The text states that Kant's argument reasons that for something to exist it must be determinable in time. (102), as in it must be known when it exists and for how long, (102). But how does this proof affect a human consciousness?  (102).

Rightly in my mind, Kant acknowledged the scientific progress that had been made over the previous two centuries. (103). Empiricists, notably John Locke and David Hume '...argued that there is no knowledge except that which comes through our experience of the world.' (103).

This idea is connected to scientism...

Scientism

Blackburn:  

Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy 

Scientism:  

A pejorative term for the concept that only the methods of natural science and related categories form the elements for any philosophical or other enquiry. Blackburn (1996: 344).  

From The Concise Oxford Dictionary Scientism: 1 a a method or doctrine regarded as characteristic of scientists b the use of practice of this. 2 often derogatory, an excessive belief in or application of scientific method. Oxford (1995: 1236).  

Oxford Science  

Empiricism: 'Denotes a result that is observed by experiment or observation rather than by theory.' (287). I view empiricism as a legitimate academic approach in reasonable contexts.

The text under review explains that Kant argues that empiricism and scientific knowledge provides vital answers but is not 'the whole answer' (104). The text explains: 'That a true empiricist would argue against Kant that all acquaintances come from experience, in other words, nothing is apriori.' (104-105).

The idea of God creating the world, is an apriori concept. (105). 

The next section is from my PhD (and as well, edited website entries), and to use make use of Kant as primary source as this textbook is a very fine, secondary source: 

2010 Theodicy and Practical Theology: PhD thesis, the University of Wales, Trinity Saint David, Lampeter

In his Inaugural Dissertation[1] of 1770,[2] Kant provides the idea that persons can only have a priori knowledge of space and time by the use of forms of the mind, which are imposed by human experience.[3]  Kantian scholars Paul Guyer and Allen Wood (1999) with the Introduction to Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, note that a priori knowledge originates independently of senses and experience.[4]  According to Pojman the word a priori is the latin for preceding and is considered knowledge that is not based on empirical experience, but is known by the meaning of words or definitions.[5]  

In the Critique of Pure Reason of 1781 and revised in 1787, Kant explains that the forms of appearance from which sensations can be understood are not themselves the empirical sensations.[6]  Human experience will determine the method and forms by which particular things are understood by what Kant calls pure intuition.[7] Concerning human experience, Kant reasoned categories are applied to objects not because the objects  make the categories possible, but rather because categories themselves provide and constitute necessary conditions for the representation for all possible objects of experience.[8]  

Therefore any human understanding of metaphysical reality would not be comprehended by empirical knowledge in a posteriori sense.[9]  Guyer and Wood point out that Kant was not an empiricist,[10] as while Kant criticized and limited the scope of traditional metaphysical thought,[11] he also sought to defend against empiricism’s claim of the possibility of universal and necessary knowledge which he called a priori [12] knowledge,[13] because no knowledge derived from experience, a posteriori [14] knowledge, could justify a claim to universal and necessary validity.[15] 

Guyer and Wood explain that Kant sought to defend the scientific approach to the acquisition of  knowledge against skeptics that dismissed rigorous arguments in favor of  ‘common sense.’[16]  Kant critiqued the dogmatism of certain metaphysicians negatively,[17]  and he also negatively noted as dogmatists those that would be intellectually indifferent to metaphysical inquiry.[18]  Kant wished to limit the pretensions of dogmatic empiricists while defending metaphysical theories[19] as a science[20] and necessary in terms of practical reason.[21]  Basically, Kant defended metaphysics as important and necessary,[22] but was sympathetic to the empiricists view that certain metaphysical questions were insoluble.[23]  

Kant noted that a priori is relational without its own inherent content.[24]  It is synthetic and incapable of serving as metaphysical proof.[25]  A priori is relative to an experience only capable of producing appearances, and so a priori is factual as experience which it conditions.[26]  W.H. Walsh explains if human beings had no experience whatsoever, they would have no concept of knowledge, not even a priori knowledge. [27]  No ideas or items concerning knowledge are literally to be considered innate.[28]

Kant reasons objects that were present in empirical human experience were in the phenomena realm, while objects outside were the noumena realm.[29]  He writes that the contingent things experienced by persons are phenomena.[30]  These are things that could be experienced empirically and would be reasonably accepted as reality.[31] The noumena realm was not available to empirical senses.[32]  

Therefore, according to Mario Derksen (2006) who wrote ‘Kant and the Question of Noumenal Ontology’ claims of metaphysical knowledge[33] would not be certain as would be any resulting doctrines.[34]  Kant explains in a follow up work entitled The Critique of Practical Reason from 1788, that the noumena is the theoretical department of knowledge denied, while the phenomena is one’s own empirical consciousness.[35]  All positive speculative knowledge should be disclaimed for the noumena realm according to Kantian thought.[36]  Kant concludes The Critique of Practical Reason by noting that the phenomena realm is the external realm where consciousness has existence.[37]  The noumena realm is invisible and has true infinity where Kant believes one can reason that contingent personality is dependent on the universal and necessary connection to the invisible world.[38] 

Importantly Kant thought it legitimate for one to postulate the noumena realm in a ‘negative sense’ meaning things as they may be independently or how they are represented, [39] but not noumena in the ‘positive sense’ which would be things based on pure reason alone.[40]  Instead, noumena categories were only useful by applying them to empirical data structured in forms of intuition.[41]  The concept of noumena, according to Kant, was bound to the limit of pretension of sensibility and reason, and therefore only negative noumenon was of intellectual use.[42]  Noumena in its negative sense are that which is not an object of sense intuition.[43]  

Kant rejects concepts of positive noumena based on pure reason[44] because, according to T.C. Williams (1987),  noumenal concepts are not determinate knowledge of anything and must be based on a sense of sensible intuition.[45]  Kant rejects the positive use of the term as it postulates  objective knowledge of a metaphysical realm.[46]  The positive sense of the term noumena is therefore fully rejected by Kant.[47]  He explains that the noumenal in the negative sense is equivalent to the thing itself and alone is involved in the concept.[48]  Kant’s view leads to a moral theology which has a doctrine of God and immortality postulated, along with theories of human free will[49] and morality.[50]  His moral theology is postulated and is not dogmatic, rational metaphysics.[51]



 

[1] Blackburn (1996: 205).  See also Karl Ameriks. Ameriks (1996: 399).   

[2] Blackburn (1996: 205). Ameriks (1996: 399).   

[3] Blackburn (1996: 205).

[4] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 2).

[5] Pojman (1996: 595).

[6] Kant (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006: 66). Rowan Williams writes that for Kant, the ‘real contains no more than the merely possible.’ Williams (2007: 205).

[7] Kant (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006: 66). 

[8] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 3).

[9] Kant (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006: 66). 

[10] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 2). Norman Kemp Smith within A Commentary to Kant’s ‘Critique of Pure Reason’ writes that empiricists eliminate  a priori principles, appealing to sense experience only,  therefore eliminating distinctions between inductive inference and expectation.  Smith (1930: xxvii).  Blackburn suggests Kant made a strong break from eighteenth century empiricism.  Blackburn (1996: 206).  Kant was not an empiricist as was David Hume that within (1779)(2004)  Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, notes that for ‘ignorant ages’ persons including geniuses have ambitiously tried to produce new proofs and arguments for natural theology and God.  Hume (1779)(2004: 2).  Hume also reasoned that the supposed Supreme Being’s infinite divine attributes would be ‘totally incomprehensible’ and that human nature would not have ideas that would correspond to the attributes of this divine being.  Hume (1779)(2004: 21).  Hume’s degree of scepticism of God and natural theology and dependence on empiricism alone was not the same view as Kant.  Kant (1788)(1997: 11).  Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 3). 

[11] Kant was opposed to speculative views of indefensible rationalism.  Blackburn (1996: 206).  Cornelius Van Til suggests Kant reasons God is not a law giver to humanity, God cannot reveal himself through nature or human constitution with the image of God.  The intellect of human beings makes no positive assertions concerning God.  Kant rejects notions of theoretical knowledge of God and, instead, appeals to practical reason and faith.  Van Til (1977: 246-247).  Plantinga writes that it is suggested by many commentators Kant demonstrated there are insurmountable problems with the idea that the traditional Christian God exists.  Plantinga (2000: 7). 

[12] Kant called cognitions independent of all experience and the impressions of the senses a priori.  Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 136). 

[13] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 2).

[14] Empirical experiences are called a posteriori.  A posteriori knowledge is empirical knowledge through experience.  Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 136). 

[15] Kant argued that inductive inference from data and experience was only possible based upon prior acceptance of  views of rational principles established independently.  Therefore experience does not validate these principles.  Smith (1930:  xxvii).  Ameriks suggests Kant rejected unjustifiable metaphysical claims in place of principles of theory which are the conditions by which persons orientate themselves within experience. These principles are ‘necessary and discoverable’ therefore defeating empiricism and scepticism concerning  reasonable metaphysical claims, and contrasting traditional rationalism and dogmatism.  Ameriks (1996: 399).   

[16] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 2).           

[17] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 3).

[18] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 3).  Kant notes in ‘Critique of Practical Reason’ empiricism needs to be contrasted by the necessity of rational a priori principles.  Kant (1788)(1997: 11).

[19] Plantinga reasons that for Kant the intellectual problem is not that persons cannot think about God but that persons cannot come to speculative metaphysical knowledge of God.  Plantinga (2000: 9).

[20] John R. Franke suggests that ‘scientific’ knowledge within Kantian thought is limited to the realm of experience shaped by rational structures of the mind.  This means knowledge of God through pure reason is impossible.  Franke (2005: 58-59).

[21] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 3). Ameriks writes, for Kant practical reason is that which determines rules for the faculty of desire and will as opposed to the faculty of cognition and feeling.  Ameriks (1996: 399).

[22] Ameriks (1996: 399).   

[23] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 3).

[24] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 3).

[25] Smith (1930: xxxvi).  Ameriks (1996: 400).

[26] Kant (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006: 43).  Smith (1930: xxxvi).  Blackburn (1996: 205).

[27] Walsh (1976: 6).

[28] Walsh (1976: 6). 

[29] Kant (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006: 482).  Guyer and Wood note that the phenomena realm is the category applied to appearances whereas things in themselves are the noumena realm, which might be thought of but not known.  Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 10).  The phenomena realm is that which appears and is therefore empirical.

[30] Kant (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006: 482).

[31] Kant (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006: 482).

[32] Kant (1781)(1787)(1929)(2006: 393).

[33] John M. Frame suggests that within Kantian philosophy humanity replaces God as the ultimate source and interpreter of reality.  Frame deduces this based on the idea that the noumena realm is beyond human experience and is unknowable.  Frame (2002: 112).

[34] Derkson (2006: 9).  From Kant’s perspective I would reason that metaphysical doctrines could be questioned and not considered dogmatic truth, but would not necessarily be considered meaningless.  Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 3).

[35] Kant (1788)(1898)(2006: 3).

[36] Kant (1788)(1898)(2006: 26).

[37] Kant (1788)(1898)(2006: 100).

[38] Kant (1788)(1898)(2006: 100).

[39] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 13).

[40] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 13).

[41] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 13).  Ameriks (1996: 400).

[42] Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 350). 

[43] Smith (1930:  413). Ameriks (1996: 400).

[44] Smith (1930:  413). Ameriks (1996: 400).

[45] Williams (1987: 149).

[46] Williams (1987: 150).

[47] Williams (1987: 151).

[48] Smith (1930:  413).

[49] Kant notes free submission of the human will to law combined with the restraints of law put upon human inclination by human reason, is respect for the law.  This law demands respect and inspires,  it is moral law.  Kant (1788)(1997: 68-69).  Lewis White Beck explains Kant theorized that human actions were both free and predictable.  He reasons, law can only obligate a really free being to act.  Human beings demonstrate free will through choice to obey or disobey law.  Beck (1963:  31-32). 

[50] Kant (1788)(1898)(2006: 846).  Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 14).  Beck explains that Kant postulated the existence of God in order that through such agency effect may be given to moral laws.  Beck (1963: 273).  Kant’s ethical system included associated human freedom with the potential for self control and self rule, and the need to think in terms of a just God sustaining moral order.  Blackburn (1996: 206).

[51] Guyer and Wood in Kant (1781)(1787)(1998: 14).



 

AMERIKS, KARL (1999) ‘Kant, Immanuel’, in Robert Audi (ed.), The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. 

BECK, LEWIS WHITE (1963) A Commentary on Kant’s Critique of Practical Reason, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.  

BLACKBURN, SIMON (1996) Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, Oxford, Oxford University Press.  

DERKSEN, MARIO (2006) ‘Kant and the Question of Noumenal Ontology’, in Catholic Apologetics Information, North Strathfield, New South Wales, Australia, Catholic Apologetics Information. http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Rhodes/3543/kant.htm  

FRAME, JOHN M. (1999) ‘The Bible on the Problem of Evil: Insights from Romans 3:1-8,21-26; 5:1-5; 8:28-39’, IIIM Magazine Online, Volume 1, Number 33, October 11 to October 17, Fern Park, Florida, Third Millennium. http://www.thirdmill.org/files/english/html/th/TH.h.Frame.ProblemofEvil.htm  

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December 30, 2020: Comments

Scriptural Revelation in my view, is not to be considered a source of the concept of pure reason as discussed by Kant and reviewers. Scripture can be used as an historical, traditional and authoritative source. Revelation from God in Scripture and resulting claims made within could perhaps (and perhaps not) be tied to Kantian concepts and intuition arising from empirical sensations. This is not a difficulty for a Reformed and some other approaches to Christianity, which do not rely primarily on philosophical deductions, but in supernatural revelation of God through empirical sensations, such as prophets, Christ, the apostles and scribes. 

In disagreement with Kant, I reason that the infinite, eternal, necessary, first and primary cause, God, can communicate as in revelation, with his finite human creatures in a reasonable, understandable way, truths. This was done so in particular through revealed, divinely inspired scripture through human authors. But it could also be done by other methods, supernaturally and naturally.

Also in disagreement with Kant,  I do reason that theistic, philosophy of religion (or as some call it, natural theology), can with reasonable certainty, deduce within rationalism, certain knowledge and truths about God, including in a limited sense, divine nature and attributes.

While at the same time this knowledge and these truths are not being supernaturally revealed and do not provide salvific knowledge.

In a sense, I agree with Kant as he rejected concepts of positive noumena (noumena or noumenal is the non-empirical realm) based on pure reason. I can reasonably apply this to pure reason and theological doctrines which would require a personal knowledge of God. I can agree that God cannot be known (to use more evangelical language) personally by pure reason.

God would reveal self and theology and doctrines that more closely, than through reason alone and philosophy of religion, define his divine nature and attributes. For example, the theology of the cross, the atoning and resurrection work God the Son, Jesus Christ, for believing humanity, Ephesians 1-2, Revelation 13, in eternity. This theology and related doctrines could not be known by humanity through pure reason. As well, God would not likely be deduced as triune through pure reason.

Negative noumena, I reason, allows for God and theology to be deduced intuitively. I would apply that and state that if a finite human being can deduce the infinite, I also reason the infinite can demonstrate self and aspects of noumena to the finite both through creation (Romans 1, but non-personal) and revelation.