Not a joke, but a Poe nonetheless. The definition that LI makes is rubbish. He has defined epistemology, not metaphysics.Kenny Login wrote:I am in total agreement with this (N.B. Important thread announcement: This is not a joke. Repeat: NOT a joke).Little Idiot wrote:Isnt the real definition of metaphysics based on the questions asked and the method of attempting to answer them, rather than on the falsifiable nature of the answer?
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Metaphysics is the Aristotelian / Platonic answer to the problem of epistemology.
Well, we all have positions and movements all over the place. What is being valued here is the ability of making an argument. Opinions are a dozen.I don't think you can cleave the formal study of metaphysics from the formal study of empiricism and render it obsolete. To a large extent this has been the legacy of (logical) positivism - to attempt to dispense with metaphysics just as you would god. But it's merely been swept under the rug of positivism (and similar things could be said regarding god). My own position is that the rug bulges all over the place.
It's not an a priori conclusion, it is rather an empirical assessment. That is, the program of research into those areas must still obey empirical standards. If not, then it is not "science". If metaphysics is this non-empirical approach to the problem of knowledge you identify, then it is gibberish. Again, this is not an a priori assessment, but fruit of empirical conclusion: All we got so far, in this discussion is a lousy T-shirt.In general psychological terms, one way of looking at it is whether you:
a) think that blurring the edges of knowledge, thought and language is abhorrent and obfuscatory,
The suspicion that things are "blurry and obfuscatory" isn't a bad one, but one should not try to disguise the giberishness of metaphysics under the rug of "blurry and obfuscatory" as an excuse for its giberishness. IOW, knowledge must NOT be obfuscating, and should try to be as clear as possible, open to scrutiny, falsification, verification, engage in original predictions, so on, so on. If you do not have these demands, you open your research program to unrestrained navel-gazing wibble, to obviousnessness, to common-sensenessness, and to really bad reasoning. This is historically accurate, and diagnosed in the last century as the symptoms of "pseudo-science".or b) your observations - either individually or as part of an empirical programme - lead you to suspect that things just ARE more blurry and obfuscatory than the logical positivists would like to tolerate.
So, if you want to engage in pseudo-science gibberish, be my guest. We the "intolerable" positivists, ironically, are more interested in the search for the truth than the absolutist ones... who would have thought it? One more paradox to ponder.