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Re: OT - Scientific proof that there is no afterlife!
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When ordinary human experience is included in the list of things something depends on, it is not "all logic" nor "ENTIRELY based on logic"; The excerpt you use denies your own thesis. [ August 22, 2003, 01:53: Message edited by: Jack Simth ] |
Re: OT - Scientific proof that there is no afterlife!
Human experience sounds to me like observing the universe for empirical facts, so you have something to philosophise logically about.
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Re: OT - Scientific proof that there is no afterlife!
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Re: OT - Scientific proof that there is no afterlife!
So, are you saying that you consider the observations part of the philosophy, or did you have something else in mind?
Observations can be used to support a position, but ISTM they hardly provide a reason for believing something else. It is the logic (or whatever alternative you propose) that links the ideas to observations. The observations simply anchor the argument to our reality, rather than say the starwars "universe" or the matrix "universe". The logic or alternative would be the gist of the philosophizing that philosophers do, as far as I see. |
Re: OT - Scientific proof that there is no afterlife!
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Re: OT - Scientific proof that there is no afterlife!
I'm not clear on the observations as argument you implied there... Could you give an example?
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Re: OT - Scientific proof that there is no afterlife!
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However, when it comes down to it, every ethical system philosophy has ever put out makes unproveable assumptions somewhere down the line. For example, Kant, one of the strongest advocates of reason you'll ever find, made such an assumption when determining what has inherent value: reasoning beings. His support for this was basically 'what else could it be?' and a note that essentially every expression of value is of the form 'valuable to' some person. Standing alone, the question defense is decent, but doesn't constitute a proof. The note on expressions of value relating to people is cultural evidence, and only valid inside that culture: an Austrailian aboriginy (spelling?) from a millenia ago might have very different ways of expressing value. Such an argument might not be valid in that culture. |
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