A Light in the Darkness wrote:Tal Bachman wrote:Off the top of my head, I might say there are two primary constraints which our beliefs must conform to, if they are to have any chance of being true: one constraint is logic, the other is evidence.
Interesting point. Please provide evidence of its truth. I think it is accepted as a matter of course in epistemology that certain kinds of beliefs are warranted absent evidence. You are rejecting this here. Yet you are asserting a proposition that, as far as I can tell, has no evidence in its favor. If that is the case, how this this not trivially self-refuting?
Hi LD,
I don't believe you read Tal's sentences carefully. While beliefs don't need evidence to be useful, those who hold beliefs which were arrived at using rational empiricism are more likely to be true, than beliefs arrived at either willy nilly, or absent reasoning, or absent evidence. And note Tal's sentence in which he discusses probability of a belief being true. Evidence of this which you asked for, is that rational empiricism works in practice. The scientific method for example employs rational empiricism and it is effective in developing theories which interpret phenomena of the world we observe. Evidence is crucial in the process, and theories are reasoned to from evidence.
If the word "logic" only ever referred to formal logic structure, then the concept "informal logic" wouldn't exist, because informal logic looks at content not structure of argument. The scientific method for example uses informal logic or inductive reasoning. I mention this because I noticed later in the thread you restricted the use of the word "logic" to the narrow sense of formal logic only and it appears you assumed Tal must have used it in that sense only.