Now, I am not saying there is not a difference, I just haven't seen it yet; so I am a little agnostic about it.
Not nihilist about it though?
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Now, I am not saying there is not a difference, I just haven't seen it yet; so I am a little agnostic about it.
I doubt they would answer with a yesRegarding the above does the Epistemological agnostic know that to be true?
So, we are all skeptical about lots of things, given the first meaning of the word above, but very few deal with the problems presented by skepticism, and do opt for mere assumption and blind faith, as you indicated.
I doubt they would answer with a yes
or no for that matter.
My Friend, after reading you reply I can see several areas where we seem to be talking past each other. perhaps we need to go back and see what the main point of our discussion is.
I went back to our first posts that we wrote to each other and I think the main point we started discussing is your attempt to maintain that some how the cognitive dissonance between epistemological Nihilism (the inability to know that any adventitious idea relates to an external world) and living as though those ideas do correspond to an eternal wold is somehow cohesive and coherent.
Would you agree with this? and if not, then what do you see as the main topic we are discussing?
My Friend, after reading you reply I can see several areas where we seem to be talking past each other. perhaps we need to go back and see what the main point of our discussion is.
I basically agree with it - except that I wouldn´t call it cognitive dissonance and that I didn´t mean to say anything about cohesiveness or coherence.I went back to our first posts that we wrote to each other and I think the main point we started discussing is your attempt to maintain that some how the cognitive dissonance between epistemological Nihilism (the inability to know that any adventitious idea relates to an external world) and living as though those ideas do correspond to an eternal wold is somehow cohesive and coherent.
Would you agree with this? and if not, then what do you see as the main topic we are discussing?
I must confess I am not entirely sure what exactly "epistemological nihilism" posits.
I have read the definition "[...]denies the possibility of knowledge and truth"
It seems that the first part can be said about "epistemological agnosticism", too, but not the second part about "truth". If I am not mistaken, "epistemological agnosticism" doesn´t deny the possibility that a statement is true (it just denies the possibility of knowing if it´s true).
I do see how epistemological nihilism - if trying to make an ontological statement as well as an epistemological statement - would expose itself to justified criticism. Now, it´s not like because positions are stupid they aren´t held by anyone.I think you will find that the definition is not making an ontological statement but an epistemological statement. If you can't know anything, you can't know if anything is true. The second part is the necessary consequent to the antecedent condition.
Well, if in your terminology epistemological nihilism and epistemological skepticism are synonyms I am not sure why you didn´t keep to the term that was being discussed, and felt that introducing "epistemological nihilism" would help with anything?Since both the epistemological nihilist and epistemological agnostic both hold to the antecedent condition (as you point out), the consequent follows necessarily for both of them, too.
I believe the Pyrrhonians go with appearances and withhold judgments in part because it allows them to obtain the state of ataraxia.
Most may not explicitly deal with the problems of skepticism, but those who do end up taking the same axioms to function, so again, it is an irrelevant objection in practical terms.
The problem is, until YOU deal with the problems of skepticism, you can't assert there is a "they."
I can, and I do.You can't assert there is an external world. You don't get a pass.
I don't, it's an axiom.So what makes you think that your perceptions correspond to an external world?
Coming from someone deadset on shoehorning blind faith into this discussion somehow, I think I'll live."Axiom," you keep using that word, but I do not think it means what you think it means.
A statement assumed to be true, to allow subsequent conclusions to be made.Perhaps you can provide us with a few examples.
I basically agree with it - except that I wouldn´t call it cognitive dissonance and that I didn´t mean to say anything about cohesiveness or coherence.
I´m not sure which standards you use here, and if they aren´t actually superimposing your paradigms upon mine.
No, it is not. When someone cries at a movie or when hearing a particular song or reading a poem, it is because that resonates with a particular emotion in the person, not because of any cognitive dissonance.Care to answer a question:
Is crying when someone dies in a movie (even though you know they didn´t really die) a token of cognitive dissonance, of incohesiveness and incoherence, by your standards?
Well, if in your terminology epistemological nihilism and epistemological skepticism are synonyms I am not sure why you didn´t keep to the term that was being discussed, and felt that introducing "epistemological nihilism" would help with anything?
Personally, I don´t know whether epistemological nihilism is making an ontological statement, but I know that epistemological agnosticism isn´t. So I would be hesitant to replace a term that clearly is meant to signify the position in question by a term that possibly adds something to it.
I was serious in asking you if you felt nihilist about the question. There is a lot of baggage with that term. I wouldn't be surprised if you felt it to be a less accurate means to convey your point than the term agnostic and that's why you used one rather than the other.
A skeptic is by definition a seeker. A nihilist seeks nothing because there is nothing to seek. To the nihilist there is no truth, no knowledge, and no meaning*. To a skeptic, who might also define him or herself as an epistemological agnostic, this wouldn't necessarily be the case. A skeptic might also make pragmatic or utilitarian use of theories, axioms, etc. if they appear to be useful to him. They may pragmatically use them while acknowledging that they could be wrong,continuing to stay skeptical of the human ability to find absolute objective truth, and while staying open to the possibility of running into theories that seem even more useful. A skeptic might use the equation E=MC squared for example if using it appears to result in a technological device that seems to work in the desired manner.
* Skeptics can create their own meaning too without violating their skepticism whereas a nihilist couldn't.