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by loup-vaillant
5836 days ago
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I understood "elimination of fallacies" as "elimination of all fallacies". That wouldn't mean we shouldn't avoid (or point to) the worst ones. I'm insisting because I can't believe that someone actually think that no fallacy is worth eliminating. Unless he state it without ambiguity. Daniel didn't. Plus, he stated the difference between debate and conversation. I think we can equate "mutual understanding" with "search for the truth" here. So Daniel, would you tell us what you actually think? Are some fallacies worth eliminating? Can the human language be truth seeking? |
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Principle of charity? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principle_of_charity
I took "mutual understanding" to be an alternative to "search for the truth" - and a very carefully chosen one at that. Although I don't agree, I can see a number of potential arguments for the idea (given some of his other premises) that in math we find the search for truth, whereas in human conversations we find increased mutual understanding (under the best conditions), but no hope of a search for truth.
I'm insisting myself because the debate is on a topic I care about and one that's inherently interesting.