Terrapin Station wrote: ↑April 13th, 2020, 7:22 amWell you very quickly twisted and turned my clarifying question about 'empirical claims', which you claim are not provable, into something about 'phenomenal' things.creation wrote: ↑April 12th, 2020, 11:21 pmWe can't prove empirical claims because we can always turn out to be wrong. The simplest aspect of this is that we can't even know with certainty what the relationship is between phenomenal data and the way the world really happens to be.
Yes that is correct.
I also wrote, 'Also, why are 'empirical claims' not provable, to you?'
So how about an argument supporting the claim that empirical claims are not provable?
Phenomenal data can differ from reality.
"Phenomenal data" doesn't necessarily refer to our mental experience per se, but it can refer to that, and one simple aspect of this is that we can't know with certainty what the relationship is between our mental experience and the external world, or even if there is an external world.
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑April 13th, 2020, 7:22 am Aside from that, we have possible perceptual problems, measurement and other instrument issues, the inherent uncertainty of inductive predictions, the fact that logic and mathematics are constructions for which there are alternate, competing/incompatible constructions possible (and that are used in various situations), and so on. We can even have (core) paradigms wrong, which would require retooling our entire conceptual background for making empirical claims.Of course human beings cannot know any thing, except for one thing, with certainty.
Here's a good article about this from a scientific claims perspective: https://www.forbes.com/sites/startswith ... 757ed92fb1
Note above that I'm not saying that we can't know things period. I'm saying that we can't know them with certainty, which is what "proof" implies.
This is well known by me. But all of this is just a complete distraction from your claim that "empirical claims are not provable".
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑April 13th, 2020, 7:22 am Knowledge in general isn't certain. Again, we go by the best evidence, the best reasons for belief, but we could always turn out to be wrong.So, why believe some thing is true, if it could turn out to be wrong anyway?
I do not believe any thing is true, for the very reason that it could turn out to be wrong. But, if you want to be believe things are true, which could turn out be to wrong, then by all means continue doing this. I really do not care. But I just do not do this.
Obviously, you cannot prove nor support your claim that "empirical claims are not provable" with an argument. So, how about you provide some "empirical claims", and then we can have a look at them and see if we can actually prove them or not? Or, would you not like to attempt this? Could this falsify your claim, and so best not be done, from your perspective?