That's where the quotemining of Popper is coming from.
I don't know what you mean by that (?).
I mean pulling short Popper quotes rend from their context in a way that can confuse the reader without an appropriate background as to what, exactly, Popper is talking about to more easily mock him. The style seems to follow Stove from what I've read.
By the way, perhaps a new low for you in non-logic is your beyond lame insinuation, or whatever it is, based on Stove's piece on women.
Your anti-feminist views parallel nicely with those of Stove. Granted, you haven't said anything as extreme, though you've walked on the borders of it and engaged in just as shoddy reasoning. Given that you recommended him here, it wasn't unreasonable to speculate that perhaps he is an influence in that domain as well. I would've wrote the same paranthetical if you were arguing something similar to one of his other dubious views (and boy howdy does he have a lot of them) in another thread.
when you yourself won't even produce one single quote for a very nasty, personally insulting, characterization of Brooks?
You were making repeated attempts to bait me in the thread, which you had attempted elsewhere prior to that, so I left you be. I'm not interested in those games. But yeah, Brooks, like Stove, is a misogynist.
s, Light - some "guesses" were to be "preferred" (Popper's word) on the most specious, and detached-from-reality grounds.
If by "detached-from-reality" you mean "pragamatic" then yeah, that sounds about right. Pragmatic notions of truth aren't prima facie wrong like you seem to regard them. If by "specious" you mean "ultimately not right," then sure. Popper failed in his quest. I don't think there are any Popperians in here and no one is resting anything they say on the ultimate success of Popper, so I don't see why you are laboring the point. If you mean "specious" as in "Popper did not provide any account of progress in knoweledge," then no. Disconfirmation alone is enough to provide progress in knowledge. We are capable of making sense of progression of knowledge with Popper's thoughts even if we aren't able to fully accord his philosophy with the dictates of reason. So when you offer the rhetorical question, "How does this make sense?!" it isn't too much to ask you to think about it a little, especially when others have started to answer the question for you. As Gadiation has pointed out to you, in a friendly way no doubt because you are not a believer, if your criticism is lobbed at those who fail to adequately account for progress in knowledge, then who exactly is left outside of your criticism? Do you think someone has succeeded where Popper has failed?
Why don't you just read "Conjectures and Refutations" yourself and think critically about it? You seem never to have done so...Why should I do all the work? I'd be surprised if you even OWNED a single Karl Popper book
You're blinded by your lack of humility. I can assure you that you are wrong here. This is getting to be an eerie repeat of Guy's lecture on ethics to me by discussing the dichotomy of "formalism" and "utilitarianism." Either you would benefit from reading much more than you have or much less. Hard to say at this point.