If you're talking about absolute certainty, I agree. But if we're after a relative, practical certainty I think we all lose, find and use it every day.I don't think we find certainty, in this life.
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If you're talking about absolute certainty, I agree. But if we're after a relative, practical certainty I think we all lose, find and use it every day.I don't think we find certainty, in this life.
Why? I can define it the way I find the definition useful.Forget trying to define it.
Since you argumentate that reality is an undefined and undefinable term, I don´t even know what "certainty within reality" might actually mean when you say it.How do we find certainty within it?
Since certainty describes the mindset of a particular person it is as subjective as it can get.Is certainty, once found, always subjective or objective or either?
Why? I can define it the way I find the definition useful.![]()
Since you argumentate that reality is an undefined and undefinable term, I don´t even know what "certainty within reality" might actually mean when you say it.
I'm certain that you're right. But also I'm certain that you're certain that what you said is certain, whos certainty certainly exists independantly of any certain viewpoint.Since certainty describes the mindset of a particular person it is as subjective as it can get.
May I ask why?
Indeed. Perhaps there is a catastrophic earthquake that both considerably re-orders the landscape AND knocks Fred out, so that when he wakens some hours later it is dark and nothing looks at all as he remembers, and he is also a bit disoriented and possibly had some memory loss, so that he can't exactly remember where he'd last been?
How does that work?
I am surprised when people say otherwise. I mean, not to say that they don't assert everyday walking around practical certainty, but when they assert metaphysical or epistemic certainty.
I don't think the issue is quite so clearly delineated philosophically. I mean, personally, I think of all sense experience as being continually verified empirically, but don't see *that* sort of verification as leading to the sort of metaphysical certainty you seem to be implying. Fred could have warrant, based in experience, to place a high degree of trust in the *usefulness* of his mental model. Does this fact allow him to make absolute ontological claims about the world? I don't think so. (Forgive me if this isn't the question you're trying to investigate here, as it has occurred to me (somewhat belatedly) might be the case. If it is not, then I apologize for derailing your thread.)
But then, my metaphysics tend toward the minimalist, and the sort of certainty you seem to be after is something I neither strive for nor think is possible or particularly useful, really, mainly because developing metaphysics that answer all the imponderables about the nature of existence and knowledge seems to me to invariably involve a commitment to some unfalifiable belief structure, and I just don't think it makes sense, or is particularly useful, to believe unfalsifiable things (due to considerations of parsimony, Ockham's Razor, etc.)).
But then, I've been kicking around a theory that religiosity correlates with one's relative comfort with imponderables: the more uncomfortable one is with epistemic and ontological uncertainty, the more likely he is to be religious. Just a vague sort of idea I have, nothing I'd care to argue at this point.
This is an interesting area of exploration, isn't it? There is another thread in the philosophy forum wherein people are discussing whether philosophy (by which they mean, I think, metaphysics: ontology, epistemology, etc.) is really a useful endeavor.
I'm not sure it's *useful*, but it's certainly fun.
Regards,
M.
Yes, it can be tricky, but then again I myself am flexible enough to follow the definition of someone else for the purpose of discussion - provided the term is used consistently in this one meaning and no false equivocations are made.Aye. Getting everybody to agree on that definition is the tricky part.
I don´t seem to understand why one would try to find solid ground in something that she assumes to be constantly changing. I have always had problems with the habit of reifying processes.I see reality as it is in a state of constant change. Since I cannot wrap my understanding around its entirety I must find something within it that I can trust enough to begin building an understanding from the ground up. I suppose that what I'm trying to outline, and vaguely at that, is solid ground so to speak. If reality were a vast ocean of change, could there be dry land? In my day to day life I find it necessary to find things certain enough for me to be relatively certain about.
No, in this case it´s just a matter of the definitions of the terms used. I explicitly made my statement in regards to the traditional meaning of certainty, in which it is defined as the subjective experience of an individual. No certainty about ´what is´ was part of my statement.I'm certain that you're right. But also I'm certain that you're certain that what you said is certain, whos certainty certainly exists independantly of any certain viewpoint.
Atrocities committed in the name of 'truth' are a shame to what I consider to be a very noble concept.
This is way too complex. What I have in mind is this: Fred of course still has a general understanding of the area and the original network of roads. What has changed is Fred's understanding of his understanding. In other words, he now understands that his original understanding of the roads will not be sufficient for him to plot a course to work. The only possible course of action that I can figure is that he must gain an up-to-date understanding of the conditions of the roads so that he can modify his original mental map.
This is where I think the topic becomes particularly interesting. Given that absolute certainty cannot possibly be achieved, when someone who has direct experience in some matter called 'A' says "A is true" what is he really saying? If he isn't lying he must be saying something of some importance but if he cannot be absolutely certain about the object of his statement then he might really mean "I have established a trustworthy understanding through experience that the truth of A is certain and you should trust me".
As the listener I find myself naturally faced with a choice... I can trust him or not, but if I do I receive no real knowledge of 'A' until I test the truthfulness of his statement for myself. It's this inert, untested 'non-knowledge' in people that I find to be personally very aggrivating.
I think you're missing my point a little here. The context of the thread is about practical certainty. It's not necessarily about the Absolute. I view practical certainty to be the most commonly used by all of us and is of the utmost importance.
As I was talking about earlier, picture having to ponder the rational foundations of your thinking every time you had to eat or use the john.... a miserable proposition I would think; yet practical certainty is what we rely on in performing these kinds of tasks and for most of our thinking.
I'm finding it to be useful in understanding the mechanics behind the statements people make. I think it might also be useful in learning to deal with change more effectively. Other than that, who knows?