This is the point at which I need to produce a usable definition of 'belief'. As follows:... So the idea that our perceptions refer to anything real beyond our own minds is just a belief like any other, for example, like the belief in the resurrection of Jesus?
'A belief is that which I hold to be true out of preference, that does not follow from objective tests and is not beholden to the rules of logic'.
Try testing the mind-model of 'the resurrection of Jesus' against this definition and then compare the results with the same test on the mind-model of 'the existence of a mind independent reality'.
Is there a difference when using my above operational definition as the criterion?
(Ie: given that both are objectively untestable?)
Its called philosophical 'Realism' ... there are many other philosophically held '-isms' that pertain to reality, so I don't think you can assert that on behalf of all human thinkers .. but I do agree that its a very commonly held philosophical model (based on a belief) to have in the back of one's mind. (Popper for instance was notorious for it).durangodawood said:I dont buy that, in that the reality of something real "out there" (even if its quite different than our perceptions indicate) is the baseline mode of understanding which we all share as human animals prior to the exertions required for religious or ideological belief-building.
Maybe .. but its still based on a belief which is objectively untestable.durangodawood said:In other words belief in the real is the opposite of a slippery slope downward to any old crazy belief. Its more like the rut we're stuck in
Oh .. and I'm not going to attempt to 'push' this notion onto anyone who doesn't claim their knowledge reality as being some kind 'privileged' knowledge .. nor on anyone who's basis of argument is distinguished by them as as being a belief. Assumed, undistinguished believed-in posits are also a problem where education in science can help, (IMO).
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