Any set of rules for determining validity, is useless, if even sound arguments have empirically false conclusions every now and again. So my point was, that if it is sound, but has a false conclusion, you should forget about the reasoning altogether.
And yes, I did mean “empirically falsified.” My mistake.
(edit):
Actually, it’s not a sound or unsound, or valid or invalid argument. The argument points out some pressures that should make us expect that people are getting dumber, and ignores the presence of pressures which should make us expect that we’re getting smarter. Either way, if from your “premises” you can derive too much belief for certain false claims, either you are too confident in your premises, or your rules for deriving belief are crappy, i.e., far from approximating Bayesian updating.
Above you said that you weren’t sure if the conclusion of some argument you were using was true, don’t do that. That is all the advice I wanted to give.
I’ll try to remember that, if only for the reason that some people don’t seem to understand contexts in which the truth value of a statement is unimportant.
Not at all. If you insist, let’s take it from the top:
I wanted to convey my reasoning, let’s call it R.
I quoted a claim of the form “because P is true, Q is true”, where R is essentially “if P then Q”. This was a rhetorical device, to help me convey what R is.
I indicated clearly that I don’t know whether P or Q are true. Later I said that I suspect P is false.
Note that my reasoning is, in principle, falsifiable: if P is true and Q is false, then R must be false.
While Q may be relatively easy to check, I think P is not.
I expect to have other means of proving R.
I feel that I’m allowed to focus on conveying R first, and attempting to prove or falsify it at a later date. The need to clarify my ideas helped me understand them better, in preparation of future proof.
I stated clearly and repeatedly that I’m just conveying an idea here, not providing evidence for it, and that I agree with readers who choose to doubt it until shown evidence.
Do you still think I’m at fault here?
EDIT: Your main objection to my presentation was that Q could be false. Would you like to revise that objection?
I don’t want to revise my objection, because it’s not really a material implication that you’re using. You’re using probabilistic reasoning in your argument,i.e., pointing out certain pressures that exist, which rule out certain ways that people could be getting smarter, and therefor increases our probability that people are not getting smarter. But if people are in fact getting smarter, this reasoning is either too confident in the pressures, or is using far from bayesian updating.
Either way, I feel like we took up too much space already. If you would like to continue, I would love to do so in a private message.
Any set of rules for determining validity, is useless, if even sound arguments have empirically false conclusions every now and again. So my point was, that if it is sound, but has a false conclusion, you should forget about the reasoning altogether.
And yes, I did mean “empirically falsified.” My mistake.
(edit):
Actually, it’s not a sound or unsound, or valid or invalid argument. The argument points out some pressures that should make us expect that people are getting dumber, and ignores the presence of pressures which should make us expect that we’re getting smarter. Either way, if from your “premises” you can derive too much belief for certain false claims, either you are too confident in your premises, or your rules for deriving belief are crappy, i.e., far from approximating Bayesian updating.
That’s both obvious and irrelevant.
Are you even trying to have a discussion here? Or are you just stating obvious and irrelevant facts about rationality?
Above you said that you weren’t sure if the conclusion of some argument you were using was true, don’t do that. That is all the advice I wanted to give.
I’ll try to remember that, if only for the reason that some people don’t seem to understand contexts in which the truth value of a statement is unimportant.
and
You see no problem here?
Not at all. If you insist, let’s take it from the top:
I wanted to convey my reasoning, let’s call it R.
I quoted a claim of the form “because P is true, Q is true”, where R is essentially “if P then Q”. This was a rhetorical device, to help me convey what R is.
I indicated clearly that I don’t know whether P or Q are true. Later I said that I suspect P is false.
Note that my reasoning is, in principle, falsifiable: if P is true and Q is false, then R must be false.
While Q may be relatively easy to check, I think P is not.
I expect to have other means of proving R.
I feel that I’m allowed to focus on conveying R first, and attempting to prove or falsify it at a later date. The need to clarify my ideas helped me understand them better, in preparation of future proof.
I stated clearly and repeatedly that I’m just conveying an idea here, not providing evidence for it, and that I agree with readers who choose to doubt it until shown evidence.
Do you still think I’m at fault here?
EDIT: Your main objection to my presentation was that Q could be false. Would you like to revise that objection?
I don’t want to revise my objection, because it’s not really a material implication that you’re using. You’re using probabilistic reasoning in your argument,i.e., pointing out certain pressures that exist, which rule out certain ways that people could be getting smarter, and therefor increases our probability that people are not getting smarter. But if people are in fact getting smarter, this reasoning is either too confident in the pressures, or is using far from bayesian updating.
Either way, I feel like we took up too much space already. If you would like to continue, I would love to do so in a private message.