Sunflowers wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2020 8:34 pm
I don't understand what you're contributing to this debate. I'm not appealing to authority - I have not said "this argument is sound because Descartes made it" or "this argument is sound because I have made it".
I was giving teo pointers, but beyond that I commented on another tangential argument that sprang up. In response to the claim that you don't know what you're talking about, you've made the argument that you do know what you're talking about because you're a philosophy professor. That argument (not the original one) contained an appeal to authority (your own) and lacked supporting empirical evidence.
Not to tell you how to conduct your own argument, but some options for responses to the claim that you don't know what you're talking about would be (order of maturity, from most mature to least):
1. Ignoring it and carrying on with the original argument because it doesn't matter what other people think and it's not relevant to the original argument.
2. Going on a brief a tangent in the discussion and demonstrating the fact of your knowledge with direct evidence -- such as citing your sources (which would involve a link that forum members can actually follow, and ideally a quote from the source presented here)
3. Saying "Your mom"
4. Making an appeal to authority of yourself while being completely unwilling to support it with empirical evidence, then going on a megalomaniacal tirade about your boundless knowledge.
5. Making death threats and then smearing feces on your computer screen.
You chose option 4. It was an interesting choice for an actual professional to make, not the worst choice but most definitely not the best. However, because you made it as an argument (even on a tangent) you now need to back up that claim -- or you can retract the argument.
Beyond the empirical matter of you being or not being a professor of philosophy, that appeal to authority is not valid because:
1. The claims had to do with very specific historical knowledge of very specific philosophers, which is a small niche within philosophy. It's not really something most philosophers would necessarily know or correctly remember. It would only be relevant to somebody with focused study in that area as his or her expertise (like you're the foremost scholar on Cartesian Metaphysics or something). It would have been more impressive if you had responded with that.
2. Even if you had the relevant specialization, the field you're claiming to have authority in so internally fragmented in belief and inconsistent in educational standards that it's effectively meaningless. It's like appeal to a naturopath's authority on medicine; they range from totally bonkers to very nearly the expertise of doctors who respect mainstream medicine.
3. Even if your field had a reasonable level of reliable credibility, you are a single person in that field. Even single physicists can be insane and advocate obviously false beliefs. However, as an aggregate in a credible field of study there is a body of knowledge represented by CONSENSUS that is very reliable. Consensus is even
pretty reliable in an academic field with as many problems as philosophy, but you didn't reference consensus. Others did...
You made a bad argument. You didn't have to make an argument at all, but you chose to make a bad one. That's on you. You can retract the argument and go back to arguing your initial claims, or you can keep arguing about the argument that's not even relevant to the argument you actually want to argue.
Sunflowers wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2020 8:34 pm
It is others who are appealing to authority - or seem to be in the vicinity of doing so - by telling me (as if I didn't know) that most contemporary philosophers are not immaterialists about the mind,
and also telling me that physicists seem to think that something can come out of nothing and something into nothing. How are those anything other than appeals to authority?
Yes, that's an appeal to authority -- a QUALIFIED authority, and one with evidence behind it.
It's consensus in physics that your third premise is empirically false. Ask ANY physicist at your university. This is very basic level stuff. You can choose to ignore it and pretend your argument is still sound, or you can learn more about why that is and either admit your argument is unsound or
perhaps find a way to amend the wording of your argument such that it doesn't apparently contradict well established empirical facts of the universe.
I don't feel it's necessary to respond to the argument beyond that because the third premise is so obviously false. It might as well be a premise that states that the Earth is flat. I'm sorry you don't find an appeal to scientific authority convincing, but that's your problem. Any sensible person will stop to think about that and realize the argument is not correct once informed of that fact.
Your argument would actually become interesting to me if you were to find a way to modify the wording of the third premise that made it clear that it doesn't contradict basic physics. By all means, do that, but it will require you learning why the premise is a problem and you don't seem willing to do that because you've called any reference to quantum mechanics "nonsense".