The problem has been explained. Those 4 propositions are "facts" that come from basic experience, but when all 4 are combined present a contradiction.
Great...we'll come back to this.
True or false isn't really relevant
Then why bother with the problem? You called the propositions "facts" above so you either want posters to consider them true or you do yourself. I don't care which. Simply stating the obvious.
There's no obfuscation, just the removal of a metaphysical hypothesis about what "natural" means.
The problem doesn't address any definition of "natural".
How did I break the law of identity?
You took one of those facts and "altered" it into something else. That's the only way to break the law of identity.
"No metaphysics in my physics"
He's literally a physics professor if I'm not mistaken. I believe that what he is saying is that the metaphysical presuppositions that can be found at the beginning of his discipline aren't matters of consideration for him, nor does he need them to be, to justify his understanding of physics. He's correct in this.
Basic experiences, not theoretical objects. The facts that theories are meant to explain.
And this makes sense now that you've explained at the bottom that basic experiences are things you consider true.
The one that I have removed from the set of propositions, namely "natural causes are physical causes."
Even though you consider the terms rather meaningless?
To not talk at cross purposes, possibly.
Exactly. I don't want us to speak past each other. I don't want to misunderstand you, and I don't want you to misunderstand me.
I've said nothing of dogma
You will below.
Amazing I was able to deduce this, right?
The epistemological grounding is the basic experience.
You mean for the propositions.
These propositions aren't theoretical, they are observed facts that need theoretical explanation.
This is you describing them as true.
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You'll notice the definition of fact is inherently intertwined with statements of truth.
Speaking of them in terms of "true" or "false" would be like speaking of taste or smell as "true" or "false". It's categorically wrong.
Well then think of another word than "facts" to describe them. Facts are more than beliefs...they are what we consider to truly exist in reality.
I know Truth because I didn't settle until I got to the bottom of the rabbit hole and stared it in the Face.
Hmmm...
My basis for saying people are deceiving themselves is I see it in operation, the shell games that people play to hide the assumptions they make about reality that masquerade as knowledge.
I'll agree they are hiding assumptions....or perhaps haven't considered them....but I don't see the problem with that. It's nice that you're upfront with your assumptions....but most aren't.
I've given you one of mine which I cannot possibly prove nor justify. Try to consider me honest. It's not a problem for me if people don't regard truth carefully....most of the time.
I'd answer this, but it would likely be pearls before swine.
No need for insults...it was an honest question and important to the discussion.
Many roads, many roads. Not one method. Many roads.
I didn't say 1...I said few. I wish I could agree...but I don't.
You don't see the problem because you've accepted ad hoc solutions by defining the problem away arbitrarily.
That's not what you did? That's what I did?
I am aware of my insistence, because ad hoc solutions don't impress me.
Solutions are Solutions....not sure why ad hoc solutions are an issue. I'm not sure why you believe your solution isn't ad hoc.
Especially in the face of a solution that is fully appropriate and doesn't require multiiplying entities needlessly. Your solutions are ad hoc, so why do you prefer them to mine?
If you're talking about the solutions I presented....I was merely throwing out a few off the top of my head for fun while dropping a duece. They appear to work but again, I came up with them rather quickly just to make a point.
I'm not holding one as my personal belief.
In what way did I break the law of identity? Explain.
At the bottom.
I'm not upset with you, not in the least.
If I were not a believer in Christ, I would be a philosophical skeptic or epistemic nihilist.
I bet those are scary possibilities to you.
You don't have anything to fear from me. I won't try to convince you to drop your religion. I would ask you to consider it's role in any possible motivation for the thread.
The world is not enough, because I cannot arrive at a self-sufficient world without cutting off my epistemic legs. My basis for truth comes from learning the name of God, and that is something each person must do on their own.
I have a sneaking suspicion for what his name is and how to communicate with him. I'm not interested in finding out.
Ordinary investigation, conjecture and falsification, hypothesis testing, modeling with as few assumptions as necessary.
Ok...without any elaborating on what "ordinary investigation" means...or conjecture and falsification....we can skip modeling entirely....it's rather clear now why you keep throwing around the words you do.
Look up the "problem of criterion".
There's no real solutions to the problem, so all paths are unjustified, though the various paths people have come up with have either proven track records or not.
Those "paths to truth" tend to begin with at least one unprovable or unfalsifiable claim.
Strictly speaking, I have no idea what is true.
Ty for the honesty.
I have a hope and a prayer, and I accomodate and incorporate challenging information into a pragmatic model of reality that I know is fundamentally flawed in some manner. I trust my reasoning faculties and sense experiences because I believe they were designed to be generally trustworthy, rather than being the result of what can only be described as chance and random collisions. Truth is something I seek, not something I possess.
I wouldn't recommend seeking truth if you want to be happy. Truth doesn't care. Regardless, I think I understand how you approach truth, I won't properly name them....because you might feel insulted and you shouldn't.
As to the problem....
These are empirical propositions or conjectures because they have not been proven true. They were only considered philosophically interesting because of the limitations of when they were proposed.
You're correct that the problem described is one of logical contradiction. Adding 1 to the other 3 and the logical contradiction occurs. This strongly suggests that at least one, if not more, of the propositions is untrue.
That said, we need not consider them true or consider the problem....and as I stated before, enough evidence for the brain actively creating the mind or "thinking" has surfaced to suggest this is the most likely explanation.