Quid est Veritas?
In Memoriam to CS Lewis
- Feb 27, 2016
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As I showed you, this type of thinking, of assuming another's thought process, is central to western thought. As this is a popular piece, Lewis did it in a popular manner instead of formally, but it is well within the standard intellectual tradition of western civilisation.I can see that we're still talking about this. I'm not focusing on the mind-reading fallacy of his argument to distract from his main point, it's entirely central to his main point. He's making assumptions about the way people think and then claiming that "you should think this way...not that way." Had he made his point without the assumptions of mind reading...I wouldn't be bringing it up.
You're the one who quoted him, I'm sure that you can go back and see all the points in which he's basically mind reading...as well as time-traveling and mind reading...the thoughts of people whom he doesn't understand the thought processes of. It's extremely apparent in his discussion of people who lived in Jesus's time, he's assuming their entire thought process without even an inkling to justify his assumptions.
Had he simply said, "you shouldn't just rule out the supernatural because it defies the laws of the natural world" we would have something to discuss...but instead he chose to dress it up in a myriad of fallacies so that he can give his audience a verbal pat on the head as if they've done well for not being skeptical.
So either you are ignorant of Western intellectual tradition and somehow missed all the examples I offered, or you are trying to obfuscate the argument.
I have literally explained this ad nauseam in multiple posts. I do think Reason is valid, that's my whole point.As for thinking and reason...by what process did you arrive at the position that Reason itself isn't valid or correct?
It is up to those who think a rational belief can be inferred from non-rational causes to show how reason can thus be valid, ie why chemical interactions would result in rational thought.
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