Instigator / Con
8
1511
rating
8
debates
56.25%
won
Topic
#5770

Traditional Knowledge & Justifiable Obtainability

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
6
Better sources
4
4
Better legibility
2
2
Better conduct
2
0

After 2 votes and with 4 points ahead, the winner is...

Novice_II
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Rated
Number of rounds
5
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
Two months
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Minimal rating
None
Contender / Pro
12
1896
rating
100
debates
93.5%
won
Description

PRO's claim: All traditional knowledge is a justifiably obtainable thing or some traditional knowledge is a justifiably obtainable thing.
CON's claim: No traditional knowledge is a justifiably obtainable thing.

Stipulations:
1) All traditional knowledge is a justified true belief.
2) When mentioning knowledge without "traditional," it is assumed that "traditional knowledge" is meant.
3) Although laws of logic are not necessarily propositions, they can become propositions or claims. For example, "no existence is contradicting" is the law of contradiction (LNC), and the format given is a proposition. That is the treatment of the laws of logic within this debate.

Please see my three recent debates to understand how CON constructs their opening statement.

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@Hurried4675

uh no i mean that all was really great , all that stuff was overflowing with so much stuff

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@Hurried4675

Yes. I think that explains it better. Rules(laws) used to justify the claim cannot be justified themselves. Kinda like how system for determining truth always lacks the ability to determine itself as true.

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@Best.Korea

I'm guessing you mean the part where I mentioned "rules of that underlie thinking itself," as in the laws of logic. It is a hard thing to clarify. I had clarified it when I called it "laws that decide the validity of arguments" near the end of the debate. I have probably done the same at other points, but it has been a long time. I'll go in more detail for readers of the comment section since you seem to have understood eventually.

What I meant was that logic, the formalization of reasoning, necessitates rules i.e laws that determine the validity of reasoning. Otherwise, there cannot be a way formalization of reasoning. "Laws" or "rules" may be a harsh way to put it, since they imply a more black and white aesthetic than what PRO is trying to imply with other formal logic systems. What is really meant is that every formal logic system has a consistent interconnected way to decide if an instance of reasoning is valid.

That fact is present in all formal logic systems that PRO has previously mentioned, they may differ in those rules and how said rules functions, but they are there. Otherwise, they wouldn't have a way to test validity in a consistent manner. PRO asserted that other formal logic systems gives credence to the idea that laws of logic do not need to apply, but is false when considering the description of laws of logic given.

My argument, in a more simplified terms, is that these rules are unjustified since it is essentially an unjustified circular argument to justify these rules. For my opponent to use the "bachelors are unmarried men" argument would fall into that pitfall since that is informed by these rules regardless of any formal logic system.

For anyone reading, tell me if this helps ^^

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@Hurried4675

Well, the first round was fine, but later I had to read some parts multiple times to just understand what is being said. This is on both sides. I dont think even voters really understood your response to Con's argument of married men being married men by definition. It took me some time to understand that one.

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@Best.Korea

Ah, that's alright. I hope that wasn't due to mostly me at the very least. What was complicated or hard to understand exactly?

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@Hurried4675

I very much agree with your side in this debate, but this got really complicated and hard to understand.

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@vi_777

Which part exactly? Was it the third reason? I'd understand the last part of the second reason; I thought them not answering any question was absurd. Or was it just the length?

whoa that is heavy now

As the debate and voting have ended, I will continue my tradition of identifying mistakes I had made in these debates. There are four I have made, and will go in order from least to most bad:

My first mistake is agreeing with PRO that traditional knowledge is a justified true belief that does not fall for Gettier's problems. While this might be true for authentic knowledge or about its nature, the debate concerns traditional knowledge; this knowledge necessarily falls for Gettier's cases. The debate topic's intention was particularly for traditional knowledge, not genuine knowledge—thus, using the nature of knowledge is irrelevant and confuses the intended conversation.

Secondly, while I still agree with what I said initially, I should have tackled it from a different angle. Instead of appealing to how there are inherent things that everyone engages in, I should have pointed out that if my argument is sound, then its self-defeating nature is irrelevant since it is a logical necessity. That is especially pertinent since PRO has expressly appealed to other formal logic systems that allow some contradictions to explain those problems. Maybe I should have asked what conditions permit a contradiction that otherwise would be considered invalid in traditional logic still exists. Oh! Wait! That may be too much of a "Q&A," as debates usually do not have questions. (PRO did not answer any questions, responding as if only debates structured as a Q&A have questions.)

Thirdly, I have claimed that I never said that all circular arguments are unwarranted, which is flatly false since I said: "Everything that justifies itself is begging the question." I apologize and feel a little frustrated that I have not done the due diligence to make the debate fully represent the ideas first presented. I see that it confused the conversation and made it unproductive. The claim is also unjustified, as PRO mentioned once in this debate. If they had pushed on this point, I would (and should) have forfeited.

As a step forward, I will explain how I made this mistake and the steps to prevent it from happening again. Definitions, typically, are propositions that have interchangeable subjects and predicates—for example:

All traditional knowledge is a true justified belief. (Original Definition)

Every true justified belief is traditional knowledge. (Valid extrapolation)

However, these definitions (and postulates) are shortenable—for example:

All traditional knowledge is a belief. (Valid extrapolation)

However, definitions cannot be shortened and interchanged:

Every belief is traditional knowledge. (Invalid extrapolation)

Furthermore, as long as my postulates and definitions are reality and the validity of the chain of logic is sufficient, then there is nothing to worry about. But that is wrong. As previously illustrated, I also need to check the continuity of the extrapolations between definitions and the rationale.

That is the mistake; I have shortened and switched the subject and predicate, making the extrapolation of the definition invalid. As a step forward, I will consciously avoid the same misstep. Furthermore, when mentioning if I had made the same claim converser reports I have, I would read my entire argument instead of only looking at definitions and postulates.

Novice is back ^^

Case and point.

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@Mall

Couldn't it be that I merely did not enjoy debating you much?

All of you that run, block , I get under your skin.

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@Mall

Who's the "other one"?

Another one I got on the run.