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What are some good Christian philosophers with a strong Biblical backbone?

2PhiloVoid

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Do you have any suggestions for philosophers working on epistemics, especially in the area of initial burdens? Principally Christian, but any recs you may have will be good.

I might, but it sort of depends on which specific nuance of 'initial burdens' you're referring to. To my mind, a lot that passes for this area of study ends up in the area of Apologetics, and I've seen arguments among Christian philosophers or apologists going different ways on this topic.
 
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Fervent

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I might, but it sort of depends on which specific nuance of 'initial burdens' you're referring to. To my mind, a lot that passes for this area of study ends up in the area of Apologetics, and I've seen arguments among Christian philosophers or apologists going different ways on this topic.
Mostly speaking to the question of when a skepticism is justified and how we might justify an initial skeptical attitude. It definitely does enter into territory of apologetics, but I'm wondering if anyone has taken the time to spell out when credulity is warranted and when skepticism is warranted in a way that doesn't arbitrarily privilege one or the other.
 
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2PhiloVoid

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Mostly speaking to the question of when a skepticism is justified and how we might justify an initial skeptical attitude. It definitely does enter into territory of apologetics, but I'm wondering if anyone has taken the time to spell out when credulity is warranted and when skepticism is warranted in a way that doesn't arbitrarily privilege one or the other.

I've seen a variety of attempts, and from different angles of approach, but honestly, I don't think anyone can construct a 'final answer' to this except in the more general uses of the term seen in the Philosophy of Law because of what I call our "existential situatedness." There are too many conceptual complications to reach a concrete conclusion one way or another.

But, sure. I can toss out different epistemic sources if you like to spend time juggling. :dontcare:
 
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Fervent

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I've seen a variety of attempts, and from different angles of approach, but honestly, I don't think anyone can construct a 'final answer' to this except in the more general uses of the term seen in the Philosophy of Law because of what I call our "existential situatedness." There are too many conceptual complications to reach a concrete conclusion one way or another.

But, sure. I can toss out different epistemic sources if you like to spend time juggling. :dontcare:
My thoughts are not to construct a "final answer" so much as to argue that there must exist a burden on skepticism or else we can only escape Munchussen through fallacious means such as special pleading. I'm wondering if anyone has taken the time to spell out what a claim is, where and when a burden exists, and when and where epistemic maxims like "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" are legitimate and when they are simply an attempt to engage in special pleading. Stuff along those lines.
 
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2PhiloVoid

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My thoughts are not to construct a "final answer" so much as to argue that there must exist a burden on skepticism or else we can only escape Munchussen through fallacious means such as special pleading. I'm wondering if anyone has taken the time to spell out what a claim is, where and when a burden exists, and when and where epistemic maxims like "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" are legitimate and when they are simply an attempt to engage in special pleading. Stuff along those lines.

Unfortunately, there have been attempts, but from what I've seen, successfully justifying that there exist a burden of proof upon a skeptic is very often less than what is actually needed. And I've wrestled with Romans 1 for decades.
 
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Fervent

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Unfortunately, there have been attempts, but from what I've seen, successfully justifying that there exist a burden of proof upon a skeptic is very often less than what is actually needed. And I've wrestled with Romans 1 for decades.
Oh, absolutely. But the question for me isn't "does God exist?" but "Is there a rational basis for belief?" which starts by examining the issue of burden of proof to establish that a blanket preference for skepticism is indefensible, then examining what species of argument could satisfy that burden and a survey of attempts at such an argument, and then moving into the analytic-synthetic divide and the its relationship with the ontological argument.
 
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2PhiloVoid

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Oh, absolutely. But the question for me isn't "does God exist?" but "Is there a rational basis for belief?" which starts by examining the issue of burden of proof to establish that a blanket preference for skepticism is indefensible, then examining what species of argument could satisfy that burden and a survey of attempts at such an argument, and then moving into the analytic-synthetic divide and the its relationship with the ontological argument.

That's one way to look at the overall issue, I suppose, and it's not out of the question. But I don't think you'll be able to successfully 'move' the entirety of the epistemic project onto rational grounds alone. There are a number of inherent psychological, sociological, and certain ontological complications that, I think, prevent anyone from establishing a universally accepted (and recognized) rational basis for belief, particularly if we're referring to Christian belief. It's just an unfortunate nature of the world in which we live. One example of complication here is shown when some one person simply doesn't have the felt motivation to care about an inquiry that you and I think they should normally care about.

Still, this isn't to say that you might not be able to establish at least a minimal rational basis for belief that refutes a complete skepticism which insist there is absolutely no way to be rational and believe. The trick here is to recognize that the project actually is one that has to show the deficiencies of the definitions by which a strong skeptic insist that he (or she) holds to their chosen epistemic framework.

For instance, you and I can invoke various aspects of the Philosophy of History and Historiography to attempt to show that those skeptics who think Jesus of Nazareth never existed aren't being fair or judicious with their methodological criteria, or that they're even perhaps holding the wrong criteria to begin with. In other words, we would dig deeper and go beyond merely the citation of a 'burden of proof' in a debate about who needs to show what and how. And there are a couple of different ways to take this strategy into argumentation. Personally, though, I just settle for the idea that different kinds of belief require, and/or are built from, different technical forms of justification and that one form for one field of inquiry isn't the same, or necessarily appropriate, for another kind of inquiry.
 
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Lukaris

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C.S. Lewis hands down. There is also a late Anglican Priest Michael Green who seems worth investigating although I only read 1 book by him but enjoyed his substance and friendly & understandable style. The book I read was: Books the Church Suppressed written in the early 2000s in response to the Da Vinci code fraud fad. He carefully studies what is New Testament scripture, secondary, valid Christian writings ( but not scripture), & fraudulent gnostic writings. He wrote a lot of books & he seems like a more every day faith writer but in the same spirit as C.S. Lewis.




 
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That's one way to look at the overall issue, I suppose, and it's not out of the question. But I don't think you'll be able to successfully 'move' the entirety of the epistemic project onto rational grounds alone. There are a number of inherent psychological, sociological, and certain ontological complications that, I think, prevent anyone from establishing a universally accepted (and recognized) rational basis for belief, particularly if we're referring to Christian belief. It's just an unfortunate nature of the world in which we live.
Yeah, my aim is more to highlight that the "evidential" burden for either skepticism or credulity must either be none or absolute with no middle ground. To give carte blanche to skepticism gives no escape from Munchaussen, so the rational question is not what we can prove but how to move the needle. I'm more or less aiming to set up a reason to take Pascal's wager seriously.
Still, this isn't to say that you might not be able to establish at least a minimal rational basis for belief that refutes a complete skepticism which insist there is absolutely no way to be rational and believe. The trick here is to recognize that the project actually is one that has to show the deficiencies of the definitions by which a strong skeptic insist that he (or she) holds to their chosen epistemic framework.
This is kind of what I am trying to look into. The central objection I am relying on is that the very fact that their epistemic framework boils down to definitions that are accepted on the basis of a sense of self evidence means that their whole framework can be summarily dismissed by rejecting the assertion of their definitions. If analytic statements can provide us with an opinion of contingent facts, then we must consider some ontological argument as valid.
.

For instance, you and I can invoke various aspects of the Philosophy of History and Historiography to attempt to show that those skeptics who think Jesus of Nazareth never existed aren't being fair or judicious with their methodological criteria, or that they're even perhaps holding the wrong criteria to begin with. In other words, we would digger deeper and go beyond merely the citation of a 'burden of proof' in a debate about who needs to show what and how. And there are a couple of different ways to take this strategy into argumentation. Personally, though, I just settle for the idea that different kinds of belief require, and/or are built from, different technical forms of justification and that one form for one field of inquiry isn't the same, or necessarily appropriate, for another kind of inquiry.
I'm thinking the discussion must begin more in the realm of conception than in discussing particulars. Our criteria for investigating particulars is bound to be tied into our beliefs about whether or not God exists, so to try to take a particular battlefield is going to be won or lost on priors.
 
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2PhiloVoid

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Yeah, my aim is more to highlight that the "evidential" burden for either skepticism or credulity must either be none or absolute with no middle ground. To give carte blanche to skepticism gives no escape from Munchaussen, so the rational question is not what we can prove but how to move the needle. I'm more or less aiming to set up a reason to take Pascal's wager seriously.
In what I wrote above, I came in afterward and added an additional statement to it that I'm not sure you saw, so I'll just copy and paste it here for your consideration because I think it has some bearing upon your project: One example of [epistemic] complication here is shown when some one person simply doesn't have the felt motivation to care about an inquiry that you and I think they should normally care about. This is one additional problem, and we might call it the Modern Problem of Neuro-contingencies, afforded now by neuroscience (and even by some aspects of Christian theology), which then pushes some amount of existential factors into the mess.

However, where Pascal's Wager is concerned on a generally recognizable rational basis, I don't seriously think you'll have much problem showing that Pascal's Wager can be taken seriously, even if it an never become obligatory. The only reason so many people these days have an issue with it is because, like so many ideas and arguments these days, the 'sound-bite' version of the Wager gets tossed about flagrantly out of context and folks----sometimes even Christian ones----don't realize they're actually talking about and criticizing a truncated (and thereby slightly twisted) version of the actual wager that Pascal put forward as a central point within the overall project that was to be his completed Pensees.


This is kind of what I am trying to look into. The central objection I am relying on is that the very fact that their epistemic framework boils down to definitions that are accepted on the basis of a sense of self evidence means that their whole framework can be summarily dismissed by rejecting the assertion of their definitions. If analytic statements can provide us with an opinion of contingent facts, then we must consider some ontological argument as valid.
I understand what you're saying here and on one part of it, I think you're right. However, unfortunately, analytic statements don't always reflect what they claim to reflect as 'truth claims' and may not measure up deductively. So, while we might be able to make some headway doing what you're wanting to do with them, they may not by necessity offer the default of providing validity (or soundness) to certain ontological arguments. If we try to use Kant's thinking, then while we can consider we have particular justification for positing certain necessary truths, they end up being more of a Ghost-In-The-Machine and that's not really the sort of sense of establishing our justifications for belief that anyone today wants to own.
I'm thinking the discussion must begin more in the realm of conception than in discussing particulars. Our criteria for investigating particulars is bound to be tied into our beliefs about whether or not God exists, so to try to take a particular battlefield is going to be won or lost on priors.

Well maybe. But I think you and I have talked about this before elsewhere, and some of this ends being an attempt---your attempt in this case---to present another Presuppositional form of argumentation. I can only say that while I value the place of some presuppositions, I don't think this approach rules in the final analysis. But.........I'm not here to argue this point. I'm simply informing your in reflection of your request for names of Christian philosophers who parallel your projected line of epistemic interest. Remember, I'm a Realist who has been moderately influenced by Critical Realism and Philosophical Hermeneutics, among other more contingent type approaches.
 
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I find Dr John Lennox pretty good at explaining biblical truth and applying them to real life. Many say C.S Lewis.

Weirdly enough I like Jordan Peterson's psychological explanations of the bible truths even though theres questions about his Christianity.

He mentions that all literature throughout time, the great philosophers and canons of western thought are all trying to get to the truth. But the bible was the original truth and first book that all truths stem from. The precondition for truth itself. Quite an expansive view but very true.

But choose wisely. You don't have to support the entire philsophy of any specific author. Just pull out what you think makes sense as per the bible. I think Peterson gives more an overview and perspective of Christian belief as a human enterprise. Which can help get different perspectives.

I think its important to know all perspectives so that it can show the bible and its truth in light of other ideas and philosophies. Like Peterson mentions that we can sample texts from the corpus of all texts to get different views on what truth is. Or what its all about.

But in doing so we begin to see a pattern that traces back to the bible which is the precondition of truth. Without it all other philsophy would not make sense.
A story:

I was taking a logic curriculum in college that required an early survey of philosophy course that was taught by the dean of the philosophy department. I signed up for the course and quickly learned that I was the only student enrolled. That would mean the offer would be withdrawn, but it best fit my intended schedule to take it that semester so I went to the professor, Dr Goldstein, to see if I could take it by independent study and testing,

"No," Goldstein said firmly, it was a course that must be taught by lecture. So, I said something about being disappointed that it would not be taught that semester. "Oh, I'm teaching it," he said. Even if to only one student, he was going to teach it. By lecture. We held the first couple of sessions in a classroom, just him and me. Then we mutually agreed that was dumb, so I just went to his office.

In that private setting, we learned we were both Christian, which rather surprised me, given his name. As it turned out, he had been born and raised Jewish. But he'd become disillusioned by Judaism and turned to atheism. But he had found atheism philosophically unsatisfying and had spent more than a decade traveling the world and investigation all sorts of religions.

Eventually, he looked into Christianity, which he'd previously avoided because he'd "heard enough" about Christianity just being in the US. But it hadn't taken him very much study into the New Testament to realize...there it was. There it had been all along.

So, that "survey of philosophy" course actually turned into "the ways all the other philosophies get it wrong."
 
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Fervent

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In what I wrote above, I came in afterward and added an additional statement to it that I'm not sure you saw, so I'll just copy and paste it here for your consideration because I think it has some bearing upon your project: One example of [epistemic] complication here is shown when some one person simply doesn't have the felt motivation to care about an inquiry that you and I think they should normally care about. This is one additional problem, and we might call it the Modern Problem of Neuro-contingencies, afforded now by neuroscience (and even by some aspects of Christian theology), which then pushes some amount of existential factors into the mess.
It seems to me that burden of proof is an object of discussions and not something that belongs to existential claims. So those who have no motivation to enter into the discussion have no bearing on where the burden of proof lies, only those who want to move the needle in one direction or the other.
However, where Pascal's Wager is concerned on a generally recognizable rational basis, I don't seriously think you'll have much problem showing that Pascal's Wager can be taken seriously, even if it an never become obligatory. The only reason so many people these days have an issue with it is because, like so many ideas and arguments these days, the 'sound-bite' version of the Wager gets tossed about flagrantly out of context and folks----sometimes even Christian ones----don't realize they're actually talking about and criticizing a truncated (and thereby slightly twisted) version of the actual wager that Pascal put forward as central point within the overall project that was to be his completed Pensees.
Yes, I'm aware. But the set-up is complicated by the fact that scientific modeling is generally assumed to have shifted the case so far along that Pascal's wager is essentially nothing more than buying a lottery ticket with astronomical odds of not coming into fruitition.
I understand what you're saying here and on one part of it, I think you're right. However, unfortunately, analytic statements don't always reflect what they claim to reflect as 'truth claims' and may not measure up deductively. So, while we might be able to make some headway doing what you're wanting to do with them, they may not by necessity offer the default of providing validity (or soundness) to certain ontological arguments. If we try to use Kant's thinking, then while we can consider we have particular justification for positing certain necessary truths, they end up being more of a Ghost-In-The-Machine and that's not really the sort of sense of establishing our justifications for belief that anyone today wants to own.
Analytic statements are true by definition, the issue being that they do not say anything about what is real. But what my project intends to establish is that any epistemic framework is going to begin with something being defined as true because, as far as I can tell, Munchaussen actually collapses into two options. Either dogma or epistemic paralysis through infinite regress. We either take something as a brute fact, or we can keep asking, "But how do I know that?" So we either embrace radical skepticism, or we accept that something about reality is true by definition. Which is reason to take seriously the premises of the ontological argument as some ontological argument must be accepted, either for God or some godless natural order, so Kant's objection can be dismissed as can Gaunilo's. The tricky part is bridging the apologist's gap and moving from a generic panentheistic deity to God of the Bible.
Well maybe. But I think you and I have talked about this before elsewhere, and some of this ends being an attempt---your attempt in this case---to present another Presuppositional form of argumentation. I can only say that while I value the place of some presuppositions, I don't think this approach rules in the final analysis. But.........I'm not here to argue this point. I'm simply informing your in reflection of your request for names of Christian philosophers who parallel your projected line of epistemic interest. Remember, I'm a Realist who has been moderately influenced by Critical Realism and Philosophical Hermeneutics, among other more contingent type approaches.
There is a caveat that separates me from Presuppositional position, in that I don't believe that the Sensus Divinus is empirically demonstrable. I share some kinship with presuppositional arguments, but I'm more concerned with the question of justification in the ordinary sense and not for God in particular. I'm interested in spelling out what it means for something to be a claim, what we mean by justification, what epistemic maxims and techniques are appropriate and why they have force, and similar. More of a complete breakdown of the very epistemic enterprise, a sort of meta-epistemics. I'm not sure who to even begin with in such a project, since my background is far more developed in theology and exegesis than in general epistemics.
 
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linux.poet

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Is there an area where I can talk about church architecture and how God sees it?
I think you may be looking for the Church History subforum, or Visual Arts. The latter forum would be appropriate for discussion of works of art in historical church buildings and posting pictures.

If you’re talking about how churches are organized, I know that Presbyterian and Congregational structures of church government exist, but think there might be a third form that I’ve forgotten about.
 
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christianlloydteegardin

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I think you may be looking for the Church History subforum, or Visual Arts. The latter forum would be appropriate for discussion of works of art in historical church buildings and posting pictures.

If you’re talking about how churches are organized, I know that Presbyterian and Congregational structures of church government exist, but think there might be a third form that I’ve forgotten about.
Episcopal.
 
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2PhiloVoid

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It seems to me that burden of proof is an object of discussions and not something that belongs to existential claims. So those who have no motivation to enter into the discussion have no bearing on where the burden of proof lies, only those who want to move the needle in one direction or the other.

Yes, I'm aware. But the set-up is complicated by the fact that scientific modeling is generally assumed to have shifted the case so far along that Pascal's wager is essentially nothing more than buying a lottery ticket with astronomical odds of not coming into fruitition.

Analytic statements are true by definition, the issue being that they do not say anything about what is real. But what my project intends to establish is that any epistemic framework is going to begin with something being defined as true because, as far as I can tell, Munchaussen actually collapses into two options. Either dogma or epistemic paralysis through infinite regress. We either take something as a brute fact, or we can keep asking, "But how do I know that?" So we either embrace radical skepticism, or we accept that something about reality is true by definition. Which is reason to take seriously the premises of the ontological argument as some ontological argument must be accepted, either for God or some godless natural order, so Kant's objection can be dismissed as can Gaunilo's. The tricky part is bridging the apologist's gap and moving from a generic panentheistic deity to God of the Bible.

There is a caveat that separates me from Presuppositional position, in that I don't believe that the Sensus Divinus is empirically demonstrable. I share some kinship with presuppositional arguments, but I'm more concerned with the question of justification in the ordinary sense and not for God in particular. I'm interested in spelling out what it means for something to be a claim, what we mean by justification, what epistemic maxims and techniques are appropriate and why they have force, and similar. More of a complete breakdown of the very epistemic enterprise, a sort of meta-epistemics. I'm not sure who to even begin with in such a project, since my background is far more developed in theology and exegesis than in general epistemics.

.... and without getting into a blow by blow argument about your several points here, I'll just say that citing your project as 'meta-epistemological' was going to be my next statement, and being as such, I don't think that where the general nature of human explanation is posited as a vehicle by which to vet out and accurately represent 'truths' about our common world, you'll be able to succeed. There is no humanly available meta-epistemological position by which to finalize our individual and corporate evaluations and make irrefutable statements about the world from irrefutable axioms.

It's just not there. And this is why in the field of Epistemology, and Metaphysics and Axiology, we see a sustained survey of pluralism and choices.

Of course, this doesn't mean that you and I can't take a position and argue for what we think is a humanly available platform providing a superior, even if still imperfect, form of epistemology.

Anyway, that's all I'm going to say on this, bro, because to say more just takes us down into .............. the Munchausen Marsh.
 
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linux.poet

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Episcopal.
That I think is practiced by the Anglicans, Episcopalians, and I think the Catholics and Orthodox might too? Eh.

I’ve been in Congregational churches my whole life, and the argument for that is Paul’s instructions on appointing elders and deacons in 1 Timothy 3, that congregational governance best fits those instructions.
 
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Fervent

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.... and without getting into a blow by blow argument about your several points here, I'll just say that citing your project as 'meta-epistemological' was going to be my next statement, and being as such, I don't think that where the general nature of human explanation is posited as a vehicle by which to vet out and accurately represent 'truths' about our common world, you'll be able to succeed. There is no humanly available meta-epistemological position by which to finalize our individual and corporate evaluations and make irrefutable statements about the world from irrefutable axioms.
That's not detrimental to my case, in fact my statements largely depend on that being true. I'm not interested in positing what is true, or what the right way to get at the truth is. I'm just interested in challenging the arbitrary acceptance of skeptical priority as an unqualified default. My main point is that, while minimal, even skepticism requires some sort of justification. And then the question becomes how we might go about establishing such justification, and seeing if there have even been attempts to do so and exploring the faults of those attempts.
It's just not there. And this is why in the field of Epistemology, and Metaphysics and Axiology, we see a sustained survey of pluralism and choices.
Yes, but let's not pretend as if there isn't a privileged position in academic philosophy.
Of course, this doesn't mean that you and I can't take a position and argue for what we think is a humanly available platform providing a superior, even if still imperfect, form of epistemology.
I'm more interested in attack than I am in defense. My aim is not to establish the way people ought to think, merely to establish that we need more than an argument from ignorance or bare assertion to insist on a skeptical default.
Anyway, that's all I'm going to say on this, bro, because to say more just takes us down into .............. the Munchausen Marsh.
Yeah, which is kind of the point. We either begin with something that must be true, or we end up paralyzed by an endless challenge of "how do I justify that?" The questions never end, so at some point we have to say "That's just how it is." Which, if legitimate, means we must take existence to be a predicate and accept that something is by definition true. If it's fair for the skeptic, it's fair for the believer. But we must keep in mind my aim is not to satisfy the skeptic's demands for answers, but to challenge the appropriateness of their approach. if we must be fully justified before we can adopt a position as skeptics insist, then they cannot move to any sort of metaphysical claim without violating their own purported commitments.

i'm not so much wanting to hear a critique of my position, so much to see if you knew of any specific literature that might speak to it in either direction.
 
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2PhiloVoid

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That's not detrimental to my case, in fact my statements largely depend on that being true. I'm not interested in positing what is true, or what the right way to get at the truth is. I'm just interested in challenging the arbitrary acceptance of skeptical priority as an unqualified default. My main point is that, while minimal, even skepticism requires some sort of justification. And then the question becomes how we might go about establishing such justification, and seeing if there have even been attempts to do so and exploring the faults of those attempts.
Can you provide me an example of some Skeptic who presses their form of skepticism in the way that you're citing. There are different degrees of Skepticism and even Hume recognized this. Citing an example of the challenge you're wanting to put a crack into may help me identify some Christian philosopher or other who has said something substantive in regard to this issue.

Personally, while I identify myself as skeptic from time to time, mine is only a mild form, a nuance of my appropriating a Critical line of inquiry. I have a difficult time thinking anyone can be a Global skeptic or even a Pyrronnian skeptic.
Yes, but let's not pretend as if there isn't a privileged position in academic philosophy.
Oh, I never pretend to do so. I just hold folks accountable for their negligences all the way around.
I'm more interested in attack than I am in defense. My aim is not to establish the way people ought to think, merely to establish that we need more than an argument from ignorance or bare assertion to insist on a skeptical default.

Yeah, which is kind of the point. We either begin with something that must be true, or we end up paralyzed by an endless challenge of "how do I justify that?" The questions never end, so at some point we have to say "That's just how it is." Which, if legitimate, means we must take existence to be a predicate and accept that something is by definition true. If it's fair for the skeptic, it's fair for the believer. But we must keep in mind my aim is not to satisfy the skeptic's demands for answers, but to challenge the appropriateness of their approach. if we must be fully justified before we can adopt a position as skeptics insist, then they cannot move to any sort of metaphysical claim without violating their own purported commitments.

i'm not so much wanting to hear a critique of my position, so much to see if you knew of any specific literature that might speak to it in either direction.

Let me rummage through my library and see what I can come up with.
 
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Fervent

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Can you provide me an example of some Skeptic who presses their form of skepticism in the way that you're citing. There are different degrees of Skepticism and even Hume recognized this. Citing an example of the challenge you're wanting to put a crack into may help me identify some Christian philosopher or other who has said something substantive in regard to this issue.
Russell's teapot-like arguments, the common canard of "you can't prove a negative", and arguments along those lines. Basically the assertion that the one making the "positive" claim bears the burden. My main point of contention is that in ordinary discourse we don't routinely accept skepticism as the appropriate response to every claim, we require some kind of reason for skepticism. If my neighbor tells me about their friend from work Mark, whom I have never met, my first response is not to demand that my neighbor prove to me Mark exists because I have never met him. I have to have a reason to not believe Mark exists.
Personally, while I identify myself as skeptic from time to time, mine is only a mild form, a nuance of my appropriating a Critical line of inquiry. I have a difficult time thinking anyone can be a Global skeptic or even a Pyrronnian skeptic.
My skepticism is more a rhetorical matter, because I am more of a pragmatist in that I see "knowledge" as an unattainable goal and instead rely on a tentative model-based epistemology. I don't think skepticism is tenable to live by, but I do think that the skeptical position isn't given enough weight in most discussions of "truth"...we are far too quick to accept that because it is necessary to adopt either a circular justification or a dogmatic one in order to escape infinite regress that we let whatever it is that we think is the right fit for an axiom off and accept assertion as a valid grounds for acceptance. So I maintain that I am a skeptic, but recognize that skepticism is fundmentally untenable. My point is simply to reverse the question from "why should I believe?" to "why shouldn't I believe?"
Oh, I never pretend to do so. I just hold folks accountable for their negligences all the way around.
Fair enough
Let me rummage through my library and see what I can come up with.
Much appreciated
 
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