GrowingSmaller
Muslm Humanist
Not good enough. I want to know what conditions must be met for a term to be regarded as meaningful, not the conditions of meaninglessness, although knowing those obviously helps too.Furthermore, if that definition is unfalsifiable, the ignostic takes the theological noncognitivist position that the question of the existence of God (per that definition) is meaningless.Perhaps you missed the wiki I provided in the 1st post?
I am not sure what a "falsifiable definition" is, btw. I thought that is was a theory that is falsifiable, or an assertion or hypothesis within a theory, not a definition of a term. What does it mean for a definition "e.g. "colour x[sup]1[/sup] is the colour of oxygenated blood in the human being" or "God is the sum total of all that exists" to be falsifiable?
Also, can you give an good example of an "unfalsifiable definition", and explain how it fails to meet the conditions of meaningfulness I requested earlier in this post?
Further note to Unereal: I am pretty sure that the idea of "falsifying a definition" is bad philosophy. For example, I cannot find an authoratitive encyclopedia entry on it, never mind Wikipedia or a intelligent looking blog. I would have thought (with a little help from my friends) that statements can be true or false (e.g. "no information can travel faster than lightspeed" or "the Sun rises in the East") whereas definitions are accurate or inaccurate ("by "information" physicists mean..." or "the term "Sun" as used in the English language refers to...."); or perhaps they are useful or useless (maybe: "a "criminal" is a reprehensible person"), or even coherent or incoherent (e.g. ""red" is the swamp that speeds mistakes"), rather than true or false in the cognitive sense per se. In fact, I am even inclined to mention the concept of category mistake.
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