Dave Ellis
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- Dec 27, 2011
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Formal or informal fallacies or not, the response in question did not address anything that had actually been said.
Some of us have internet access that is severely limited. Some of us have time that is severely limited.
Meanwhile, I doubt that anybody here is looking for "agreement".
When people want answers--answers/responses to what has actually been asked/proposed--and their resources are severely limited, don't be surprised if they point out formal or informal fallacies that might be undermining the effort.
For a guy who has limited time or internet access, you sure write long drawn out responses.
Identifying a fallacy can easily be done with a two minute google search, so to be frank, I'm not sympathetic when you want to incorrectly accuse others of fallacies, then claim you're justified in doing so because you lack time to understand what you're talking about.
I for one am certainly looking for an agreement on here. Either someone changes their mind to my viewpoint, or someone changes my mind to theirs (which can easily be done by providing evidence of their claims).
But the status of the data and the experiment depend only on the properties of the data and the properties of the experiment. The fact that, oh, the data was gathered and the experiment was conducted in a partriarchal system and 99% of the people doing the work were white men has no bearing on the status of the data or the experiment, the defenders of science seem to insist. Add it all up and I see the defenders of science taking an absolutist position with respect to science and its findings.
You're confusing arguing from a position of confidence due to strong empirical backing, from arguing from an absolutist position.
If you have a ton of evidence to support your case and you argue strongly in favour of it, that is not absolutism if you keep in mind that the data is subject to revision or improvement.
And again, anyone who understands science would understand that point as well.
If we were talking about the goals of various intellectual traditions that might be true.
But we are not talking about the goals of various intellectual traditions. We are talking about absolutists and relativists. Specifically, we are talking about how some people seem to take an absolutist position with respect to A but at the same time behave as if A is relative. A could be a number of different things, not just "science". I wish that right now I could provide an example other than "science", but my time is too limited.
And again, scientists , etc would never argue from an absolutist position.
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