luke warm, on Mar 30 2009, 05:17 PM, said:
jdonn, on Mar 30 2009, 03:08 PM, said:
luke warm, on Mar 30 2009, 12:50 PM, said:
b. there is insufficient evidence for josh to hold this belief
therefore all josh's beliefs are suspect
is that pretty much what you're saying?
Yes. It is not proof that all my other beliefs are wrong, it is simply evidence that points in that direction and that should be considered.
Of course that example was hypothetical since, even ignoring that your statement b. is wrong, see what I say below.
no, the syllogism states that since you're wrong in one belief you can be wrong in all beliefs... this is an example of faulty or hasty generalization (among other things), and is fallacious...
"Suspect" and "wrong" are not synonyms, so perhaps you didn't say what you meant to say. If you had used the word "wrong" in your example I would not have agreed, nor is that what I (or I believe anyone else) is claiming about you.
To be clear, the claim isn't that your belief based on insufficient evidence makes you necessarily wrong about other things. It's that your belief makes it more likely than it would otherwise have been that you are wrong about other things. And that is not a fallacious line of reasoning.
I mean it's hard to dispute. With which of the following claims do you disagree?
- A person who bases a conclusion on insufficient evidence in some given situation is more likely to do the same in any other randomly chosen situation than a person who did not base a conclusion on insufficient evidence in the given situation.
- A person who is more likely than another to base a conclusion in a randomly chosen situation on insufficient evidence is also more likely than the other to be wrong in his conclusion in that situation.
I think it would take some real combination of creativity and pig-headedness to disagree with either statement.
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Sorry new policy, $50 fee for answering stupid questions. I'll give you my paypal if you want.
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not necessarily, it depends on the question... for example, you and i could hold a debate on "do invisible floating pink elephants exist" and we would both rightly have to present arguments for whichever side we took
Do you know what the expression "you can't have your cake and eat it too" means? Why is the burden on me to prove there is insufficient evidence that the universe was designed for a purpose, but on both of us to prove there are/aren't invisible elephants floating over our heads right now?

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