Archaeopteryx
Wanderer
Sounds like you could do with a bit of doubt.After reading your response I am so grateful that my life is not so full of doubt.
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Sounds like you could do with a bit of doubt.After reading your response I am so grateful that my life is not so full of doubt.
Not only have you avoided the question, but used a typical black&white type logical fallacy to back yourself up.If you had the power of precognition, you wouldn't have to ask. You'd know the answer before this thread even started.
I have doubt, after all I am human, but I am not so full of it.Sounds like you could do with a bit of doubt.
Hmmm... I'm not so sure. To loosely quote Bertrand Russell: "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts."I have doubt, after all I am human, but I am not so full of it.
The more truth a person holds the less doubt he entertains.
After reading your response I am so grateful that my life is not so full of doubt.
But wisdom is proved by there actions. A person full of doubts does not know which way to turn and is stuck struggling in trying to do something. While a person of truth and fearlessness acts true.Hmmm... I'm not so sure. To loosely quote Bertrand Russell: "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts."
I don't think doubt necessitates indecision. Instead, it encourages questioning and inquiry; processes that can lead one closer to truth and better, more informed decisions. A person who is cocksure may "fearlessly" steer his ship into a reef without ever admitting that he could be wrong. That sort of fearlessness is more commonly known as hubris.But wisdom is proved by there actions. A person full of doubts does not know which way to turn and is stuck struggling in trying to do something. While a person of truth and fearlessness acts true.
Agreed.I don't think doubt necessitates indecision. Instead, it encourages questioning and inquiry; processes that can lead one closer to truth and better, more informed decisions. A person who is cocksure may "fearlessly" steer his ship into a reef without ever admitting that he could be wrong. That sort of fearlessness is more commonly known as hubris.
Doubt requires humility. It therefore opposes arrogance.Agreed.
That is why I said '... a person of truth...' and not a person of arrogance.
I see a false opposition of doubt with truth and fearlessness - they are not sides of the same coin.But wisdom is proved by there actions. A person full of doubts does not know which way to turn and is stuck struggling in trying to do something. While a person of truth and fearlessness acts true.
That is so illogical.
Part of determining and justifying your reasoning requires imagination of what could be true. Preknowledge requires an element of imagination. "If so..., what if..., could that be ...," etc., all these are imaginings. In this regard, unjustified methods of knowledge were used to determine what is logical or not. To disregard the illogical is in itself illogical.
Paradoxes exist because they require imagination to see both sides of the coin, though each side cannot see the other. Philosophers of logic are prone to only come from one side of the coin. And non-philosophers are more willing to accept that the coin does have another side to it. By doing so, they can see both sides of a paradox.
Yes, many people draw the distinction that you describe above. This kind of division between what ends up being deemed as useful and what is not deemed as such (even though it may still be useful) can even be seen manifested among a number of scientists (surprisingly!).Good response. I think this is a big part of it. It is similar to the distinction people often draw between "theory" and "practice," as though theory is somehow inherently irrelevant to practice.
Where there is humility there is truth. It is truth that opposes arrogance. Humility is accepting the truth above anything else, which brings a person back to earth (humus) from the high perch of arrogance.Doubt requires humility. It therefore opposes arrogance.
Perhaps, but what is the truth and how do we know it?Where there is humility there is truth. It is truth that opposes arrogance. Humility is accepting the truth above anything else, which brings a person back to earth (humus) from the high perch of arrogance.
That is why a person of truth is not arrogant, but humble in knowing what is true opposes any arrogance/pride/ego within.
By knowing the truth is sure and reliable, doubt has no hold, and the person becomes doubtless (fearless) to act, without looking back.
Perhaps, but what is the truth and how do we know it?Perhaps, but what is the truth and how do we know it?
Is believing that a falsehood is the truth more dangerous than accepting that we may not know the truth, or that the truth may be context dependent?
Because the knowing does not comply to logic, doubt (fear) is introduced to change a 'yes' to a 'perhaps'.
It takes faith to hold onto the 'yes' long enough for all the doubt (veils) to subside (drop) and allow the truth to be seen by our doubtlessness. As I said, truth does not need to validate (promote) itself, but doubt does.
A person of truth knows the truth about their fears (doubts) and how it clouds the real truth; where logic (validity) is just another form of context/story clouding the truth again.
Testing the spirit is exactly what 'It takes faith to hold onto the 'yes' long enough for all the doubt (veils) to subside (drop) and allow the truth to be seen by our doubtlessness,' is about. Doubt is a fear. The only thing that fears the truth is what is not true, such as our self-fabricated ego.That's dangerous. I've met many deluded people and conspiracy theorists who thought that way.
Knowledge needs verification.
"Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God, for many false prophets have gone out into the world." (1 John 4:1)
"Now these Jews were more noble than those in Thessalonica; they received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so." (Acts 17:11)
But it does; that's why the Bereans in Acts 17:11 were "examining the Scriptures."Truth does not need verification
Let me be like the Bereans and verify that: you're mistranslating the passage. ζῶν γὰρ ὁ λόγος τοῦ θεοῦ καὶ ἐνεργὴς = "For the word of God is living and effective" (HCSB).Hebrews 4:12 For the word of God (Truth) is living and active.
Why are you assuming that doubt has no hold when a person knows something true? What could warrant such absolute certainty?Where there is humility there is truth. It is truth that opposes arrogance. Humility is accepting the truth above anything else, which brings a person back to earth (humus) from the high perch of arrogance.
That is why a person of truth is not arrogant, but humble in knowing what is true opposes any arrogance/pride/ego within.
By knowing the truth is sure and reliable, doubt has no hold, and the person becomes doubtless (fearless) to act, without looking back.
It is not knowledge unless it has been verified. Natural philosophy has taught us that. Verification comes before knowledge. Consider Descartes, who realised the only truth he could he could know in and of itself was that he thought; acknowledging that even his experience of God could be a malevolent spirit deceiving him.There is a difference between a knowledge of the truth, which does not need verification, and knowledge of untruth that seeks verification.
Perhaps you're conflating the concept with its reification - but what you say is contradicted by everyday experience. Instances of truth are only obvious if true by definition - and even then, as in mathematics, only the most trivial tautologies are obvious.Truth does not need verification, it is obvious. It does not need or want anything to make it true since it is already true. Truth is pure and complete.
You can't blame others for failing to understand you; communicating your ideas effectively is your responsibility. What you have been communicating isn't a philosophical argument, but unsupported assertion without logical foundation.I feel I have nothing more to say, that would make sense, to those that cannot discern what I have been saying.