Gabriella,
BHS – ok, I see you've come back with more of your assertions for me to respond to. At least this time you made some attempt to evidence them by quoting posts, albeit your assertions are still incorrect.
As I explained in #29136 there are lots of competing claims of fact or predictions for the future when it comes to Brexit.
We have heard contrasting claims of objective fact and statistics, for example about the ways in which joining the EU has impacted Britain's economy and way of life. Hence I said in #29136 “and people not sharing your beliefs or claims of fact goes with the territory of beliefs that can't be objectively validated as true.”
I wrote my post some time after hearing a difference of opinion on LBC while driving in the car about claims of objective fact since 1973. Statistics and facts were quoted but there was a difference of opinion about not just the facts and statistics but also how much of those facts and statistics should be attributed to UK membership of the Common market and then the EU, and how much to other factors. There was also a difference of opinion on, for example, definitions of concepts such as “failure” and “success”, and on examples of EU interference in parliamentary sovereignty.
It didn’t seem particularly problematic in the real world that different people believe different facts as objectively true, or cannot agree on a definition of a concept, in so much as we manage, through the process of democracy and the rule of law, to make decisions and tolerate difference of beliefs of fact that we cannot validate as objectively true. Some of these claims about objective facts and some of these concepts are even privileged in our society by the democratic process and rule of law. For example, the Economist recently had an interesting article on how the concept of death and the metrics accepted as evidence of the ending of life can be defined differently in different countries, and the attempts in various societies to change both the definitions and the metrics chosen to indicate end of life. This of course impacts on issues to do with resuscitation, medical treatment, insurance, probate etc.
I therefore think the point I was making is very relevant to your repetitive assertions about religious people who make claims of objective fact about resurrections etc. My point being – so what if they do make claims of objective fact?
It isn’t any more problematic for society that there are competing claims of fact about the supernatural that you can’t validate, compared to all the other competing claims of fact about the natural world that we also can’t validate in reality, regardless of whether in theory someone can come up with some method of investigating or validating those facts or metrics, though the difficulties of doing so accurately in practice mean no consensus on the metrics or facts will happen.
We manage to function without knowing the truth was my point, so I am baffled by your continued comedic routine about the supernatural. If it's because a couple of planes flew into a building and killed 3000 odd people, that's hardly significant compared to the number of deaths attributed to non-religious political causes that we all manage to put in perspective and continue with our lives.
As I said, I get you think the theoretical difference between the 2 types of claims of objective fact is profound. I look at the real world result of competing claims of objective fact and I don’t find the difference profound.
Having made that point, not really sure there is any point in responding individually to the rest of your assertions.
I would restate that no, I don't think "pretty much all “people of faith”... think that their faith is a more reliable guide to truth than just guessing". I think a lot of people of faith, as with beliefs of a non-religious nature, stick to their faith or beliefs because they have a felt a positive impact on their life from holding that faith or religious/ non-religious beliefs, and it presumably is valid in a democracy to advocate for beliefs that they feel have a positive impact on people's lives, and to oppose attempts to stifle expression and practice of those beliefs.
In a democracy it is also perfectly valid for people opposed to certain beliefs to try to prevent the practice of them in the public and sometimes private sphere, depending on the nature of the belief.
ETA: I think you have interpreted my phrase "national strategic interests" in some unique way that I am not familiar with. Given your other interpretations of texts, where we have disagreed, that you have arrived at your own particular interpretation is not surprising to me.
So back in Reply 29194 you posted a string of missteps, mistakes, misrepresentations and misunderstandings that in Reply 29201 I took the time to correct. In response you’ve stuck with your standard plan (presumably learnt at the knee of Vlad) of just ignoring the corrections and repeating your same mistakes. I note too that you return over and again to the term “assertions”, which seems to be code for, “OK, I’ve been shown to be badly out of my depth here and I have no rebuttals available so I’ll just use a term I hope is sufficiently pejorative for no-one to notice that I’ve been kippered again".
Fair enough. If that’s how you roll then go with it, albeit at the price of confirming that you have nothing to contribute here.
As for your basic mistake that I see you’ve returned to as a dog returns to its vomit, could you at least try to think before committing it again?
Veeery slowly now…
1. There’s a qualitative, categoric difference between claims that are investigable
in their nature (eg, Brexit) and claims that are not (eg, “god”). However hard, uncertain, ambiguous, difficult, whatever the practical investigation of the first group may be, they are at least
in principle investigable. The second group in themselves though are not.
It would help if you’d indicate that you’d at least grasped this point now. Note too by the way that I make no comment yet on why that matters – we’ll come to that – I’m just trying to get you to take the baby steps of understanding
the principle.
2. In answer to your “so what?” though, the answer of course is “so a lot”. For the non-investigable set (“god”, “soul”, “prophet” etc) those words are the beginning
and the end of it. They’re white noise. There’s nothing more to consider because there’s no way to investigate these claims. That’s why it’s a very bad idea for people to assert them as facts – any such claim is epistemically identical to any other, so if you think the claim "god" is a fact because that's your faith you have no choice but to permit "leprechauns" as fact too because that's my faith. This means that all faith claims can be put in the same box marked "guesses".
For the second set though, there
is something to investigate it and a means to do it – the results may be incomplete or hard to evaluate, but they are results nonetheless.
Thus if, say, someone says, “one year after leaving the EU everyone will be £1k richer” and in fact after one year everyone is £1k poorer, the claim can be shown to have been false. And by this method we reach consensus - for example, "nazism = bad; philanthropy = good". That is, we have a means to distinguish one investigable claim from another investigable claim and to select or reject on that basis.
And
that's why the difference between the investigable
in principle and the non-investigable
in principle matters. Incidentally, you make the same mistake here that Vlad routinely makes by the way - that unless a truth can be shown to be absolute, then all truth claims are equal. It's bollocks of course because all that matters is that some truths are more
serviceable than others, and thus that we can apply some and reject others in a coherent manner.
Is any of this sinking in yet?
Anything at all??
3. Now consider the terrorist whose defence for blowing up a ‘plane is, “but that’s my faith”. Can you see the problem now? The answer to that of course is, “so fucking what?” but his response then would be, “but you too privilege faith as a method to establish truths. I do the same, so who are you to say that I’m wrong?”
What then would your rebuttal be? Now, finally, can you begin at least to grasp why privileging faith in the public square over just guessing is such a bad idea – it renders you defenceless against
the same argument for any manner of horrors that you’d abhor but that you now cannot rebut because they’re just the same argument your rely on for your beliefs –
faith.
4. As for your, “I would restate that no, I don't think "pretty much all “people of faith”... think that their faith is a more reliable guide to truth than just guessing" I assume you’re joking or feeling unwell or something. Are you seriously suggesting that if you went into a church or a mosque or a temple and asked the worshippers there whether they thought their faith meant their beliefs were no more likely to be true than just guessing just about every one of them wouldn’t disagree? Seriously though?
5. Short version – Susan was right: as always, the point has eluded you and the welter of irrelevant, irrational vitriol you throw at it instead of engaging with it does you no credit.
Apart from all that though…