Final-Fan said:
appolose said:
1. Wait, "If A, B, and D, then E"... How would that even work?
2. There is no direction you think is up; you're totally dizzy, it's completely foggy, you have absolutely no indication which way is up. You have to take a wild guess. Just as it is, I'm saying, to take empiricism.
Occam's razor says the least complex explanation must be the most likely, and that's what I meant was not necessarily true. And no, you could not say it's likely that the least complex is likely, either; nothing indicates that possibility.
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1. Simple, or at least it's simple for me. Logic class was way too easy for me. If you have "If A and B, then C" (call this P1) and you have "If C and D, then E" (call this P2) and you presume A, B, and D, then: Since A and B are true, then you use P1 to get C. Now you have A, B, C, and D. Since C and D are true, then you use P2 to get E. Voila!
2. But that is the equivalent of saying that you have no sense data at all, which is not what we are discussing. We have no 100% trustable sense data.
To include my second edit: "Please remember that Occam's Razor applies to of the available explanations and considering the available data. I suspect that the source of your problem with it may be in there somewhere."
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1. Oh, so you're not giving a 3-premise argument (that's what I was confused by); your simply restating a conclusion/premise as it's two premesis. In any case, it's still a question of if your premesis are true, so forgetting what came before originally wouldn't affect the logic, unless your restating them all at the same time, and in that case, you wouldn't have to rely on memory.
2. We have no data that is even 1% trustable; that's what I'm saying. Data can support anything you want it to, because it doesn't speak for itself (as we agreed).
I'm not quite sure what your edit does to the situations.