CG wrote:Vagueness is when you know some properties of an entity but there are properties you don't know that are not open to your determination. Thus science is intrinsically vague.
Well if we presume the existence of the properties that are not open to our determination, I suppose. I'd say it would be more correct to observe that ultimate truth is unknowable. But I'll accept this Clark. What does that make religion then? It is not even vague. Where are these properties of the entity that you know about religion?
Some prominent vague conceptions in science are dark matter, dark energy,
Is this a vagueness in the gaps argument?
and some would argue entropy
Would these "some" include you Clark?
(certainly pre-statistical mechanics entropy when is was purely phenomenological was).
?
Most phenomenological work (in the scientific not philosophical sense) ends up being a logic of vagueness.
Maybe you could provide an example here of what you mean. That would be a little less vague.
Within biology vague terms become much more common and arguably also inescapable due to the types of descriptions biologists use and the type of phenomena being investigated.
Are you referring to complexity here? Could you be a little less vague please?
I don't think that describes how everyone encounters either science or religion.
What do you think describes how everyone encounters science or religion?
For the vast swath of the country science is not understood in terms of evidence.
For the vast swath of the country science is not understood, period.
You know it might just be because they have different experiences.
Such as?
I'm certainly not going to say you are following a reasonable path given your experiences. Yet you are swift to make judgments about people whose background you are frankly pretty ignorant of and whose experiences you are even more ignorant of.
So I'll lay off those who still believe in Santa because perhaps they have caught him ascending the chimney?
That doesn't exactly clarify. More what?
Playing dumb here Clark?
You're dealing in vagueness here. (grin)
Really? You find "In this case the sacrifice of all you are and possess including life itself" to be vague? You have to literally sacrifice everything for your religion in the LDS faith Clark. You have been to the temple, yes?
If you are making an economic argument then you're not doing epistemology and if you're doing epistemology you're not doing economics. So I think you're making a category error again.
Keep up the attempt at distraction Clark.
I'm addressing the underlying philosophical principles.
Link your paper when it gets published.
