In post #173, I said:
Meleagar wrote:So, is the reason that you "must" accept an opinion or a belief categorically different from the reasons that others must accept their opinions or beliefs?
In post #174, you quoted the above and replied:
James S. Saint wrote:No. They are exactly identical. The difference between us is merely our physical/mental abilities and our particular evidences from experiences.
In post #175, I began my agrument from your statements by attempting to paraphrase you:
Meleagar wrote:You and I must hold the views we have by identical causations. I assume you extend that to all people; that everyone holds the views that they must have for the same ultimate causation.
To which you responded in post #176:
James S Saint wrote:No. For the same reasons. The particular causes are different for everyone.
I'm not even going to read the rest since you got the premise wrong.
You were making a distinction there that the reasons are exactly the same, but the causes are different for everyone.
Apparently, however, you are retracting this distinction that was so important before that you wouldn't even respond to my post because now, in post #191, you state:
That is NOT what I said. I said that all people come to believe what they believe by the same method or reasons/causes.
You've just contradicted yoursef.
It seems now that you are faced with an intractible problem of explaining how my "must-held" beliefs are significantly different from your "must-held" beliefs, you wish to pose a third, ad hoc "explanation" for this distinction between "must"-held beliefs, which appeals to some very complex process:
James S Saint wrote:Those causes for their beliefs are interdependent and thus cause a complex array of end results, but the actual fundamental process being used is the same for everyone and everything thing.
So now you are claiming a "fundamental process", but this is simply moving the essential problem to a new place or term and not solving it.
Examining your argument, we know that this
fundamental process can produce both true and false beliefs and opinions; we know that this fundamental process can (and has) produced both your opinion that everyone holds opinions they must hold, and my opinion that I, at least, can hold any opinion I wish.
You have claimed that my opinion is somehow a self-deceit or a lie, but have yet to explain how I should know that or act on it, since I
must hold the erroneous opinion that you claim is a lie. How can I be "lying" when I believe I am expressing a true statement? Doesn't lying require knowledge that one is passing an untruth?
The problem with James' explanation is that he has not asnwered the following:
How am I supposed to
not hold an opinion I
must hold, James? How can I be deceiving anyone when I am honestly expressing an opinion I not only actually hold, but one I apparently
must hold, whether it is actually true or not?