Is there no stability to knowledge? Personally, I'd feel pretty silly if I found something from yesterday or today that was correct and I passed it by simply because I believed everything is wrong and about to be proven as such. Not sure I get your line of thought on this part.Toge wrote:. . . yesterdays theories are incorrect and obsolete. Today's theories will be considered incorrect in the future and theories in the future will be rendered incorrect farther in the future. . . .
Do you want to be great?
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Re: Do you want to be great?
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Re: Do you want to be great?
- Generally no, there isn't. Theories can be constructed and evidence can be gathered. We would instinctively think that more evidence leads to greater clarity, but even the "best" theories have certain phenomena they can't explain. If the theory is young, settling of such inconveniences can be postponed to future, but eventually the number of anomalities starts to build up. When it's enough, paradigms that are foundations of important theories are shaken and new paradigms have to be taken in their place. Knowledge thus doesn't really increase incrementally as time goes on. This is a rough idea of philosophy of science by Thomas Kuhn.RazorBrain wrote:Is there no stability to knowledge?
- Pragmatic point of view helps. Perhaps it's useful to accept limits of our knowledge and stop trying to strive for objective, metaphysical truths (as in Plato's world of ideas). We're entities in physical world, constrained by our habits of action. What is true is simply what works. Check out C.S. Peirce. Great philosopher.RazorBrain wrote:Personally, I'd feel pretty silly if I found something from yesterday or today that was correct and I passed it by simply because I believed everything is wrong and about to be proven as such. Not sure I get your line of thought on this part.
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Re: Do you want to be great?
It's disingenuous to claim that no knowledge is stable and then hold on to that as a rock-solid, stable fact.Toge wrote:- Generally no, there isn't. Theories can be constructed and evidence can be gathered. We would instinctively think that more evidence leads to greater clarity, but even the "best" theories have certain phenomena they can't explain. If the theory is young, settling of such inconveniences can be postponed to future, but eventually the number of anomalities starts to build up. When it's enough, paradigms that are foundations of important theories are shaken and new paradigms have to be taken in their place. Knowledge thus doesn't really increase incrementally as time goes on. This is a rough idea of philosophy of science by Thomas Kuhn.RazorBrain wrote:Is there no stability to knowledge?
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Re: Do you want to be great?
Ahem!Toge wrote:- Generally no, there isn't. Theories can be constructed and evidence can be gathered. We would instinctively think that more evidence leads to greater clarity, but even the "best" theories have certain phenomena they can't explain. If the theory is young, settling of such inconveniences can be postponed to future, but eventually the number of anomalities starts to build up. When it's enough, paradigms that are foundations of important theories are shaken and new paradigms have to be taken in their place. Knowledge thus doesn't really increase incrementally as time goes on. This is a rough idea of philosophy of science by Thomas Kuhn.RazorBrain wrote:Is there no stability to knowledge?
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Re: Do you want to be great?
Leads me to think, What is the true meaning of Knowledge?
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Re: Do you want to be great?
What kind of knowledge?Hazushi wrote:Leads me to think, What is the true meaning of Knowledge?
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Re: Do you want to be great?
Monadology wrote:
What kind of knowledge?
I first saw this as "What Knowledge?" which for a strange reason feels like it answers my question, but knowledge in general.
From wiki...
The definition of knowledge is a matter of on-going debate among philosophers in the field of epistemology. The classical definition, described but not ultimately endorsed by Plato, specifies that a statement must meet three criteria in order to be considered knowledge: it must be justified, true, and believed.
In my Britannica collection on the shelf over here is a famous quote by someone who I can't remember or find at the moment because I don't know which book it is in said that, "The true meaning of Knowledge is that you know nothing."
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Re: Do you want to be great?
My point was merely that there may not be such a thing as knowledge in general. Even if there is, its "true meaning" might differ depending on what sub-category it belongs to e.g. scientific, ethical, aesthetic.
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Re: Do you want to be great?
Monadology wrote:My point was merely that there may not be such a thing as knowledge in general. Even if there is, its "true meaning" might differ depending on what sub-category it belongs to e.g. scientific, ethical, aesthetic.
Yes true I know what you mean.
For aesthetic knowledge do you mean that of the philosophy idea of knowledge?
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Re: Do you want to be great?
Aesthetic knowledge (at least as the word aesthetic is typically used in my experience) would be knowledge concerning issues of beauty, taste, creativity and the like.Hazushi wrote: For aesthetic knowledge do you mean that of the philosophy idea of knowledge?
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Re: Do you want to be great?
Monadology wrote:Aesthetic knowledge (at least as the word aesthetic is typically used in my experience) would be knowledge concerning issues of beauty, taste, creativity and the like.Hazushi wrote: For aesthetic knowledge do you mean that of the philosophy idea of knowledge?
Yea Im off abit, I was thinking of Epistemology which is the philosophy theory of knowledge....
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hyperpape
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Re: Do you want to be great?
No, you're not. The whole discussion is about knowledge, Monadology was just claiming that perhaps we can't generalize about knowledge, because there are fundamentally different kinds of knowledge--scientific, aesthetic, and whatever other categories there might be.Hazushi wrote:Yea Im off abit, I was thinking of Epistemology which is the philosophy theory of knowledge....
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Re: Do you want to be great?
Things being true isn't an absolute. It seems foolish to reject all knowledge just because it isn't perfect. 3.14159 might not be pi, but it's better for making circles than 3.
In other words - more evidence does lead to greater clarity, just not necessarily perfect clarity.
Also, xkcd love.
In other words - more evidence does lead to greater clarity, just not necessarily perfect clarity.
Also, xkcd love.
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Marcus
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Re: Do you want to be great?
This conversation reminds me of Stephen Garvey ... talk about a flashback ... haven't thought about his books in 15 years or so.
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DrStraw
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Re: Do you want to be great?
I just had a haircut. My wife tells me I look great. Mission accomplished.
Still officially AGA 5d but I play so irregularly these days that I am probably only 3d or 4d over the board (but hopefully still 5d in terms of knowledge, theory and the ability to contribute).
