Theme: Truth

  • ontology results from epistemology. Yes to the rest

    ontology results from epistemology.
    Yes to the rest.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-14 10:48:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1834907129339138060

    Reply addressees: @Archaic3one

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1834734387910627590

  • DEFINITIONS: ONTOLOGY (What Exists) AND TELEOLOGY (What Works) AND LIMITS (Crite

    DEFINITIONS: ONTOLOGY (What Exists) AND TELEOLOGY (What Works) AND LIMITS (Criteria for Decidability) IN NATURAL LAW

    In the paradigm, vocabulary, and logic of our work on the Natural Law, the terms Ontology and Teleology would require operational and naturalistic meanings consistent with the method of measurement and decidability we use to construct universally commensurable truths.

    Both terms must be freed from the philosophical baggage of traditional metaphysics and integrated into the pragmatic structure of Natural Law, where they represent distinct but interrelated dimensions of human perception, cognition, and action. Let me attempt to operationalize these concepts in that context:

    Ontology in the Context of Natural Law:
    Ontology traditionally refers to the study of being, existence, and the nature of reality. Within your framework, Ontology would instead refer to the universal set of constructible, operational truths that describe the existence and relations of objects (whether physical, informational, or social) within any system of perception or interaction.

    Ontology within Natural Law would mean the operational constructability of entities, relations, and phenomena within the universe, derived from first principles and evolutionary computation. It includes both what exists (existents) and what is possible to exist within the constraints of physical, behavioral, and cognitive reality.

    This would include everything humans can sense, perceive, and understand within the constraints of empirical observation, operational reduction, and reciprocity—everything from physical objects to social contracts to cognitive concepts.

    In simpler terms, Ontology is the set of all things that can be empirically, operationally, and reciprocally tested and constructed. It is “what is” or what can be decided to exist, in any domain, based on its fitness to survive adversarial falsification.

    In Natural Law, this ontology isn’t static or abstract; it’s dynamic, evolving as human cognition, cooperation, and understanding expand. Ontology is built by constructing knowledge through the adversarial process of decidability, and anything that can survive empirical falsification belongs to our ontology.

    Teleology in the Context of Natural Law:
    Teleology refers traditionally to the explanation of phenomena by their purpose or goal. Within your framework, Teleology would refer to the directional purpose or evolutionary outcomes that emerge from cooperative behavior and human action in service of optimizing reciprocity and decidability.

    Teleology in Natural Law would mean the adaptive consequences or purposive outcomes of actions, institutions, and laws, measured by their long-term fitness to preserve and expand human cooperation, reduce conflict, and sustain reciprocity.

    Rather than referring to an abstract final cause or inherent purpose (as in classical philosophy), teleology in your system would be an empirical measure of purpose and result, grounded in evolutionary outcomes. It evaluates “what works” by measuring its impact on the stability and advancement of cooperative human relations. Therefore, Teleology is operational and evolutionary, pointing to the fitness of strategies, systems, or rules in achieving cooperation and decidability at different scales.

    In simpler terms, Teleology within your work is “what succeeds”—the outcomes of human actions and institutions as they work to sustain human cooperation and reciprocity over time, measuring success by its ability to reduce harm, prevent irreciprocity, and foster cooperation.

    Limits Determine Decidability of “What Works” (Teleology):
    In order to avoid deception by the use of arbitrary criteria for decidability, we rely on clearly defined limits—those limited to human sense perception, action, and demonstrated consequences over time. These limits include cooperation, reciprocity, survival, innovation, and adaptation. By using these these natural boundaries as limits, we ensure that teleology—our understanding of “what works”—is based on observable consequences and the evolutionary success of actions, rather than subjective or ideological framing. Therefore, limits provide the necessary structure to test the fitness of our actions, ensuring decisions are rooted in real-world outcomes, not abstract ideals.

    This explanation aims to clearly define how limiting criteria ties directly to natural consequences and prevents deception through arbitrary framing.
    Distinguishing Ontology and Teleology in Natural Law:
    Ontology is about what exists, constructively proven through decidability and falsifiability across all domains.
    Teleology is about what succeeds, proven through the adaptive fitness of behaviors, systems, and laws in achieving cooperation and reciprocity.
    They are connected in the sense that ontology defines the field of possible actions and existents, while teleology defines the directionality or purpose that guides those actions towards optimized outcomes within that field.

    Final Definition in Operational Terms:
    Ontology (What Exists): In my work, ontology refers to the set of operationally constructable entities—whether they are physical, social, or cognitive—that survive adversarial testing and are decidable within the framework of human perception and cooperation. It’s the domain of what can be known, based on falsification and testimony.

    Teleology (What Works): Teleology refers to the directional purposes or outcomes that human actions and institutions achieve over time, in service of maximizing reciprocity, cooperation, and conflict reduction. It’s the measure of success of actions within the ontology of possible realities, determined by their fitness to sustain human cooperation and reciprocity, innovation, adaptability, and evolution.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-13 19:09:00 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1834670635361955840

  • Grok is roughly correct. Given the principle purpose of my work is the extension

    Grok is roughly correct.
    Given the principle purpose of my work is the extension of the prohibition on suggestion, obscurantism loading, framing, coercon, fraud ,and deceit from commerce to commons, and to do so by prohibiting the various means by which lying has been industrialized and institutionalized (despite warnings of prior generations), at least in public to the public in matters public, we specifically prohibit the principle means by which nearly all philosophical sophisms, pseudoscientific, pseudorational and sophistic claims are made. However it is but one of the means.

    Ask more if you wish.

    Reply addressees: @truthb4face


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 18:01:21 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833566446791913472

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833562641123709309

  • It’s false, because of the statement of ‘unfounded premises’. We could instead s

    It’s false, because of the statement of ‘unfounded premises’. We could instead say that any premise must be constructable from first premises – and if not we may not claim it is true. And that all arguments derived therefrom must satisfy the demand for infallibility in the context in question.
    What that means is that there are very few general rules in the universe, and that if premises can be constructed from first principles (effectively ‘laws’) then we can claim we testify truthfully.
    The problem with most philosophy is that it’s orgins are in mathematics and as such are statemetns about words instead of statements about evidence.
    The value of economics (neutral language) and law (demonstrated interest, imposition of costs, motive) are that they answer the questions that philosophical and theological discourse evades by every possible means – the truth.

    That’s the short version. I’m in the middle of something. If you need further clarification let me know.

    Reply addressees: @andrewkatz4


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-10 17:57:11 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833565396823379970

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1833559230441304206

  • Google is your friend. Do you seriously respond to your betters without the mini

    Google is your friend. Do you seriously respond to your betters without the minimum due diligence necessary to test your presumptions?


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-09 01:14:32 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1832950684997529610

    Reply addressees: @TheBlueWave205 @BlueTexas24 @Scaramucci @lolapoliticka

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1832929959528026547

  • Truth is truth. I stated the truth She has no achievements nor demonstrated comp

    Truth is truth. I stated the truth She has no achievements nor demonstrated competency. That’s true. Your attempt to lie by redirection is a typical response by the mind of a child.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-08 17:45:07 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1832837584151531851

    Reply addressees: @OrbWeaver6 @BlueTexas24 @Scaramucci @lolapoliticka

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1832790307689078974

  • DEFINING PROPAGANDA IN IDEOLOGY Propaganda: Propaganda is the systematic and del

    DEFINING PROPAGANDA IN IDEOLOGY
    Propaganda: Propaganda is the systematic and deliberate dissemination of information, ideas, or rumors to influence people’s opinions, attitudes, or behaviors in support of a particular cause, position, or political agenda. It often employs emotional rather than rational arguments and may present selective or distorted information.

    Key characteristics of propaganda:
    – Intentional and strategic
    – Aims to shape public opinion or behavior
    – Often simplifies complex issues
    – May use emotional appeals over factual arguments
    – Can involve repetition of key messages
    – Omits or distorts contradictory information

    Relationship to ideology:
    Ideology is a system of ideas, beliefs, and values that shape how individuals or groups understand and interpret the world. Propaganda is often used as a tool to promote, spread, or reinforce specific ideologies. The relationship between propaganda and ideology can be described as follows:
    – Promotion: Propaganda is frequently used to promote and disseminate ideological beliefs to a wider audience.
    – Reinforcement: It can reinforce existing ideological views among adherents, strengthening their convictions.
    – Simplification: Propaganda often simplifies complex ideological concepts to make them more accessible and appealing to the masses.
    – Opposition: It can be used to criticize or undermine competing ideologies.
    – Mobilization: Propaganda can motivate people to take action in support of an ideology (e.g., voting, protesting, or fighting for a cause).
    – Framing: It shapes how people perceive events or issues through an ideological lens.
    – Legitimization: Propaganda can be used to justify or legitimize actions or policies based on ideological grounds.
    – Recruitment: It can attract new followers to an ideology by presenting it in an appealing or persuasive manner.

    In essence, propaganda serves as a powerful communication tool for spreading and reinforcing ideological messages. While not all ideological communication is propaganda, and not all propaganda is tied to a cohesive ideology, there is often a close relationship between the two. Propaganda leverages ideological frameworks to craft its messages, while ideologies often rely on propaganda techniques to gain traction and influence.

    Separating Philosophy and Ideology:

    Scope and purpose:
    Philosophy: Aims to understand fundamental truths about existence, knowledge, values, reason, and the nature of reality. It seeks wisdom and understanding. Ideology: Focuses on a set of beliefs about how society should be structured and governed. It aims to guide political and social action.

    Approach:
    Philosophy: Encourages questioning, critical thinking, and continuous revision of ideas.
    Ideology: Often presents a more fixed set of beliefs and aims for consistency within its framework.

    Flexibility:
    Philosophy: Generally more open to revision and contradiction.
    Ideology: Tends to be more rigid and resistant to fundamental changes.

    Ultimate goals:
    Philosophy: Pursuit of truth and understanding, often for its own sake.
    Ideology: Typically aimed at achieving specific social, political, or economic outcomes regardless of truth.

    Importance before and after democratic government:

    Before democratic government: Philosophy was crucial because:
    It provided a framework for understanding the world and humanity’s place in it.
    It offered tools for critical thinking and questioning authority.
    It explored ideas of justice, virtue, and good governance that influenced rulers and thinkers.
    It wasn’t constrained by the need to appeal to a broad electorate.

    After democratic government: Ideology became more prominent because:
    Mass participation in governance required simpler, more actionable ideas.
    Political parties needed coherent platforms to attract voters.
    It provided frameworks for organizing society that could be debated and chosen by the populace.
    It offered narratives that could mobilize large groups of people towards common goals.

    Reasons for this shift:
    Accessibility: Ideologies are often more accessible to the general public than complex philosophical arguments.
    Actionability: Ideologies provide clearer roadmaps for political action, which is crucial in a democratic system.
    Identity formation: Ideologies help form group identities, which is important in democratic politics.

    “Ideology served to dumb down ideas for mass nitwittery.”

    -CD

    Reply addressees: @TeaPainUSA


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-08 14:15:46 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1832784900434378752

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1832560506160214416

  • RT @curtdoolittle: STOP THE HATE – OF ADULTS The hatred by the infantilized for

    RT @curtdoolittle: STOP THE HATE – OF ADULTS
    The hatred by the infantilized for the adult, empirical, scientific truth and its advocates be…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-06 15:16:11 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1832075327977275420

  • (NLI) Well, the draft of the introduction is done. Ready for editing. 😉 Only ‘D

    (NLI)
    Well, the draft of the introduction is done. Ready for editing. 😉
    Only ‘Dunno’ I have is the location of The Method, which could go before Truth and perhaps ought to. https://t.co/PmDR6wtIlH


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-04 21:09:43 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1831439522258940307

  • We will get to the heart of it. It will just take a bit of back and forth – if y

    We will get to the heart of it. It will just take a bit of back and forth – if you are intellectually honest and patient. As far as I know I’m the leading theorist in these matters. But developing a commensurable frame necessary for discourse takes effort.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-04 14:32:07 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1831339461851939090

    Reply addressees: @jess_ann_pin

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1831334062071718361