And I already admitted that you are right on this account.
Can we then agree that liberty and freedom must come before science-based domination?
That science can not be used as a reason to take away other people's liberty and freedom?
If we can agree on that, then all the rest is really of no greater concern to me
What you didn't admitt is that there are things we can know with almost absolute certainty, and things where even scientists are mostly guessing, and at times forgetting that they're doing so. If you answer the question of the elevator with the answer of medical diagnosis, you're seriously overgeneralizing.
I've said I believe in "cogito ergo sum". It's meaning is simply that if you are aware of your thoughts they must exist. So I have acknowledged that I believe that existence of your own thoughts can be known by yourself with certainty. The content of your own thoughts, however, can not be known by yourself with certainty, IMO (as always it is IMO only!

)
Elevators and medicine are both concepts that exist as thought-content, and therefore belongs to the realm of what can not be known with absolute certainty.
Your thoughts are there, it's hard to doubt that, but what you think OF may be either objectively real (as in: existing independent of your mind, and will remain in existence even if your mind goes away) or may be an illusion (as in: existing because of your mind, and will cease to exist if your mind goes away)
So, just to see if I understood you correctly there: to the question "do you believe an Elevator based on the assumption that g = 8 m/s^2 can lift the weight it was designed to lift", you answer with "yes".
You brought up your elevator argument to counter my request for personal liberty and freedom, saying that if people were free they would begin to build elevators on all kinds of random numbers and crazy ideas.
You used this elevator-example as your case against allowing people freedom.
Here's my reply:
Show me someone who intends to make elevators like this, and then we can take it from there.
We live in a society were competition is hailed as the holy grail or yellow brick road to happiness and progress. If competition is really the bringer of joy, prosperity and happiness, then let people compete. Invent your own gravity, and may the best gravity win. Just don't expect people not to fight for their own views if you try to suppress them (they would be truly crazy if they didn't)
And don't use scare-tactics (your, either real or imaginary, fears of what you think MIGHT happen, such as elevators built by nutty fruitcakes who want to eat all the cheese off the moon causing it to never be full again) to limit other people's liberty and freedom. Because the moment that happens, then it becomes PURE politics and will nolonger have anything in common with the pursuit of true knowledge and true disciplines of science.
So, to round this part off; show me someone who seriously wants to build elevators on top of the g = 8 m/s^2 notion (and are willing to spend money on it)
I dare you, jedidia, to find such people
No, it's not MY safety and freedom that concerns me, it's safety and freedom in general. Our western society today offers exceptional freedom. Freedom that was achieved by, among other things, making life easier for people, which was done by scientists. If you take away all the technological aids we have, and the civilatory structure (which has to limit individual freedom in order to assure the same freedom for all participants) you'll take away a lot of freedom too. Because then it's just the hard cold reality that you need to find some food today or you might not live the next. There's no authority telling you what to do, but only the pure neccessity of survival dictating your every move. The only way to avoid that is having some level of civilisation, and some level of technology.
Science neither gives freedom nor imprisonment... it is how it is USED (by those in power, such as the political establishment or the rich or influential elite) that determines the result.
Surveillance cameras, for example, take away your freedom to walk in privacy, but give you freedom from being falsely accused of some action.
There are 2 sides, not 1.
Science doesn't only make life easier, it also makes it harder.
Before nuclear power, no-one in Fukushima city had to move away to make it easier for them to survive from radiation poisening...
But ofcourse it was harder for them to get electricity.
2 sides, not 1.
Science is not the protector of freedom.
It is just a tool that can be used for both good and evil.
Science is like a gun; it does not discriminate. Only people discriminate.
I fully realize that, and never denied it. However, I am able to evaluate certainty levels. There's a "maybe true", a "probably true" and a "pretty certainly true", which you seem to fail to realize.
Ok, I will agree with you that I don't see gradients of certainty when it comes to thought-content. I believe no thought-content can be said to be certain as long as we haven't yet determined if it comes into existence because of outside influence (true and actual objectivity) or because of internal stimuli (the illusion of objectivity)
Actually I believe in God, so I don't believe that the universe is a self-contained system without outside interference. As such, the laws of thermodynamics don't aply fully to my perceived situation. The difference between you and me here is that I STILL believe that the laws of thermodynamics are correct in the boundaries in which they were formulated, and not just utterly wrong and illusionary and without practical meaning.
It's a belief

As long as we can agree on that (that it's a belief, rather than an undeniable fact), I won't contend whatever you believe, but rather allow you the liberty and freedom to find whatever you seek from your life in it

If your beliefs make you happy, then there's a chance that happiness will rub off on me, and I would be irrational if I didn't welcome that
Free people are, in my experience, happier people.
(and by free I don't mean as in homeless living on the street competing with the birds on eating around the mold on stale bread crumbs, but free as in having access to actual decision-making options regarding your own life. A homeless person is not free, by my definition of free, if they're not homeless by their own choice. You're only free if you can make choices)
jedidia, this has turned into another horribly long post... and I know from my experience on internet-forums that loathing are often expressed towards long posts... but alas I didn't see how I could truncate it any further without losing the actual meaning or ignoring parts of your post.
If I should try to narrow it down to the original subject, that of the teacher presenting a non-mainstream view, then I really don't think it's any big deal

What's YOUR opinion on the original subject?
Well, why do you do that then?
I don't.
Also your Descartes quotes are maybe underlining your opinion of me, but don't contribute at all to the thread.
Neither does your false accusations against me, for having ulterior motives.
That was a personal attack on my character, Urwumpe. Not a productive informational contribution.
Philosophy is more than just a source of nice abstract quotes.
I agree.
Descartes did not begin and stop with "cogito ergo sum", but explained in a lengthy article how he arrived at this conclusion and what consequences he derived from it.
I agree.
And this article was never about the the scientific process and the trustworthiness of measurements - it was about existence and the dilemma of perception, reaching to the nature of reality itself
Yet his book (from which "cogito ergo sum" stems) was titled:
It doesn't matter if the world around you exists, or does not exist, since the consequences for your perception are the same. You can't break the illusion of a wrong reality, that only exists in your mind, since you can only interact within this perceived reality.
Whether or not something matters to someone can only be a personal choice. It's not your duty, or right, to make choices for anyone but yourself.
The moment you claim that something doesn't matter at all, you elevate YOUR private opinion to a level where it does not belong. By elevating your private beliefs into universal truths you make yourself god. Be a god to yourself all you like, but not to anyone else (unless they specifically desire that from you ofcourse)
It is absolutely wrong, if you want to claim that other people could see the world differently because of cogito ergo sum and be perfectly right as well. That is a reduction of Descartes philosophy that removes the meaning from it. These people are wrong if their own logical conclusions are wrong. That is the key aspect.
"Cogito ergo sum" does not exclude the possibility of multiple self-aware minds existing within the same truly objective world.
"Cogito ergo sum" excludes only 1 thing; the possibility that you do NOT exist.
"Cogito ergo sum" proves only 1 thing; that YOU exist.
Your personally experienced "Cogito" can be entirely self-made, a fully personal/private/internal illusion without any outside stimuli influencing it. In that case it could be considered the absolute world, since nothing is outside it.
It can also be partly influenced by a surrounding truly objective world (which may or may not include OTHER "cogito's", or maybe even ONLY include a number of "cogito's"). In that case it could NOT be considered the absolute world, since there would be things outside it.
If the true world is made up of 3 co-existing "cogito's", each of which is only partly influenced by each-other, then you could have a situation where "cogito" #1 receives certain stimuli from #2 and #3. These stimuli may be received ONLY by #1. #2 receives from #1 and #3, and #3 receives from #1 and #2. If whatever stimuli each single "cogito" receives from the other 2, are NOT re-transmitted... then there IS a possibility that each "cogito" might experience a completely different world-view than the other 2. End-result MIGHT be 3 very different views that don't look anything similar to each-other (except for 1 thing, which they all have in common: the fact that they are self-aware, the fact that they all can subscribe to the fact of "cogito ergo sum")
This is just 1 possibility of an endless number of possibilities
You must not believe others. Sure. You can claim the moon is made of cheese regardless the evidence somebody else delivers. But this also applies to them: In you world, you might be the lone guardian of the truth, in their world, you are just a nutcase.
As long as we give each-other liberty and freedom, you can define anyone as a nutcase.
If we abandon liberty and freedom, in favor of an absolutist dictatorial world-view, only those in power may define someone as a nutcase.
Which world do you prefer? The one where you have a say, or the one where you do NOT have a say?
It's not really a tough choice, is it?
(Am I happy that I never went into studying philosophy, dealing with it every other month makes my head hurt and conclude "I am confused, ergo I need a beer")
We all have our personal areas of interest where we invest more of our effort and try to get in shape. Some people do sports, and can run miles without losing their breath, other people sing opera, and can sing night after night without losing their voice, and some people ponder about philosophy so often they either have become immune to losing their mind or have already lost it
No
