A definition of “rational argument” that explicitly referred to “reality” would be a lot less useful, since checking which arguments are rational is one of the steps in figuring what’ real.
checking which arguments are rational is one of the steps in figuring what’ real
I am not sure this is (necessarily) the case, can you unroll?
Generally speaking, arguments live in the map and, in particular, in high-level maps which involve abstract concepts and reasoning. If I check the reality of the stone by kicking it and seeing if my toe hurts, no arguments are involved. And from the other side, classical logic is very much part of “rational arguments” and yet needs not correspond to reality.
If I check the reality of the stone by kicking it and seeing if my toe hurts, no arguments are involved.
That tends to work less well for things that one can’t directly observe, e.g., how old is the universe, or things where there is confounding noise, e.g., does this drug help.
A definition of “rational argument” that explicitly referred to “reality” would be a lot less useful, since checking which arguments are rational is one of the steps in figuring what’ real.
I am not sure this is (necessarily) the case, can you unroll?
Generally speaking, arguments live in the map and, in particular, in high-level maps which involve abstract concepts and reasoning. If I check the reality of the stone by kicking it and seeing if my toe hurts, no arguments are involved. And from the other side, classical logic is very much part of “rational arguments” and yet needs not correspond to reality.
That tends to work less well for things that one can’t directly observe, e.g., how old is the universe, or things where there is confounding noise, e.g., does this drug help.
That was a counterexample, not a general theory of cognition...