- Dec 26, 2009
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It appears to me that, any why-series questions beg for a common context.
Before one begins to answer a "why" question, either establish a common context,
or be prepared to reduce your answer to the self-evident.
It seems a courtesy to think a thing through before one begins to answer.
Having a grasp of the ideas which must be employed to be denied,
seems the greatest among these courtesies.
I base my observation upon the idea that all reasoning is pre-suppositional.
(One must employ pre-suppositional reasoning to deny pre-suppositional reasoning.)
I am left to believe that, apart from a common context; based on:
existence, identity, non-contradiction, exclusion, causality, necessity, contingency,
the correspondence of truth, etc. , why-series questions cannot be satisfied.
Before one begins to answer a "why" question, either establish a common context,
or be prepared to reduce your answer to the self-evident.
It seems a courtesy to think a thing through before one begins to answer.
Having a grasp of the ideas which must be employed to be denied,
seems the greatest among these courtesies.
I base my observation upon the idea that all reasoning is pre-suppositional.
(One must employ pre-suppositional reasoning to deny pre-suppositional reasoning.)
I am left to believe that, apart from a common context; based on:
existence, identity, non-contradiction, exclusion, causality, necessity, contingency,
the correspondence of truth, etc. , why-series questions cannot be satisfied.