Zonie63
Posts: 2826
Joined: 4/25/2011 From: The Old Pueblo Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: SpanishMatMaster Hello, Zonie63. When I reject something, I try to explain why I reject it, and ask for an explanation. This explanation is your move. My questions are my move. I have played this successfully in other times, yes, verbally and written. Sometimes I won, sometimes the other participant won. In this case, we are here: - You tell that "Even if Azonier existed, it wouldn't matter, since my perceptions would still tell me that I have a nose." I understand that you personalize. Your perception do not speak English. You perceive something (you feel the touch of your nose), and then you conclude that you have a nose. And you tell me that you would conclude the same even if you were wrong. That is ok. I understand this. The question is, how can you conclude it. The step between "I feel the touch" and "I have a nose" is not justified, as long as you cannot exclude the possible existence of Azonier. Well, I suppose it would be like this. If I feel the touch of this thing on my face, if I can see it in the mirror, if I can be aware of this thing by smelling through it (or having to blow it during cold and allergy season - a rather unpleasant time), then I'm aware that I have something on my face. The fact that I call it a "nose" is just something I learned, since that's what it's called in my language (although the word itself seems to have a root going back to Sanskrit, since everybody has a nose, so every language has a word for it, as far as I can tell). So, before we even enter Azonier into the equation, I'm aware that "I feel the touch," as it's presumed that I was aware of my nose even before I learned the name for it. "I have a nose" is what I learned first, as it became a part of me as long as I've been alive, so this was part of my perception and reality long before I was ever old enough to understand concepts of God, religion, or even alien beings called "Azonier." If no one had told me about Azonier, then I probably would never even consider the question at all. However, if you inform me of the possibility of the existence of Azonier, some being who has the ability to steal my nose and replace it with a substitute nose without my knowledge, then I have to think about that one. It never dawned on me that such a being might exist. So, given my original, default perception of "I feel the touch," when faced with the question of Azonier, there are two possibilities: - Azonier exists. - Azonier does not exist. Those two possibilities exist, independent of the question of whether or not I, personally, have a nose. As an agnostic, I honestly do not know which possibility is correct. My common sense tells me that Azonier does not exist, but common sense may not always be purely logical; that may be more in the realm of intuition and gut instinct. That's why it's difficult to narrow it down to an "either/or" question like this. As to the question of whether or not I have a nose, which was one of your original questions, of course, I'm going to say "Yes, I have a nose. It's there. I can feel it and see it in the mirror." But when faced with the question of the possibility of Azonier's existence, then my response would be, "Well, if that's true, then it doesn't seem like anything different to me" (perception). I may not know the absolute, final, ultimate objective truth as to whether or not I truly have a nose, but I'm just going to assume that it's true that I do, in fact, have a nose, even if there might minuscule doubts in the back of my mind. So, when you say that the step between "I feel the touch" and "I have a nose" is not justified without excluding the possible existence of Azonier, I don't really see how it's not. You seem to be saying that there must be a final answer, either a definite "yes" or a definite "no," without leaving the question more open-ended. The answer might likely be the same if I believed in the existence of Azonier, since I could say that my nose was a gift from Azonier. I would still believe that I had a nose, even if it was in the form of a gift nose from "the Great Azonier, giver of noses." If I was a true believer, then I would still say that I have a nose. quote:
I will try with an analogy. Let us imagine that you see a friend coming out of a room in a party and he says you "no more girls there". Can you suppose that there are no more PEOPLE there? No. Because you cannot exclude that there are guys there. If you could then you could make the step between "no more girls" and "no more people". But first you have to make sure that there are no more guys. If you conclude that there are no more people, you are implicitly saying that there are no more guys. I agree completely. If someone said "no more girls there," I would not jump to conclusions and say that there are no people in there. I might ask for more information or go in and see for myself, but there wouldn't be anything for me to conclude just upon hearing the statement itself. It could mean anything. Maybe there are girls there, but they're all with other guys, and none of them wanted to be with him. So, he comes out and says "no more girls there." But I wouldn't conclude that automatically without further information. quote:
Now with Azonier. You feel a touch, which would correspond to your nose if you had one. Can you affirm that you HAVE one, from this? No. Because you cannot exclude that Azonier has created this sensation. If you could, then you could make the step between "I feel this touch" and "I have a nose". But first you have to make sure that Azonier does not exist. If you conclude that you have a nose, you are implicitly saying that Azonier does not exist. Ok? So... are you saying that? Or not? And if you are saying that... how, being that you do want to apply the rule I suggested? Well, I conclude that I have a nose, because I just do. "I feel this touch," if that's what we'll call it. It's what I've had all my life, for better or worse. So, that would be my first answer, before I even consider the question of Azonier. If I neither affirm or deny the existence of Azonier does not change the fact that I still have a nose. As an agnostic, I don't feel that I have to make a final decision on the existence of Azonier to be able to prove, through commonly accepted scientific methods, that I do in fact have a nose. I can prove that I have a nose, scientifically and beyond any reasonable doubts. If I went to any doctor and asked them if I had a nose, they would say that I do. So, I can prove that I have a nose, but I can't prove the existence or non-existence of Azonier. According to what little I know about science and the universe in which I live, I am satisfied, beyond any reasonable doubts, that I have a nose. I don't see how it's irrational to refrain from denying the existence of Azonier in order to be able to state that I have a nose, especially if there's nothing I can do about it either way. I could see your point if I actually believed in Azonier, but I don't. But belief is something different. I choose to neither believe nor disbelieve, and I leave it at that. When I say my "day to day life," I operate as if this world is the real world in which I live in, that I have a nose, and that God, angels, demons, ghosts, Azonier etc. do not exist - or at least, I have never seen anything like that, nor do I believe that all reasonable doubts have been satisfied. (I sometimes joke around about not believing in anything except the Great Pumpkin, but I'll leave that aside for now.) But I won't say that any of it is untrue either, because I just don't know. It's a big universe out there, and quantum scientists have considered the possibilities of different dimensions, alternate universes, so when I consider just how little we truly know about the universe and the nature of our existence, it's mind boggling. So, I keep my mind open to possibilities, without necessarily accepting them as fact unless I have reason to. But I'm not going to deny the possibility as either. So, I guess the question have at this point would be this: Is it really necessary to say for certainty that Azonier does not exist in order for me to state positively that I have a nose? I can prove that I have a nose, but I can't prove anything about Azonier one way or the other.
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