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Self-refuting idea

A self-refuting idea or self-defeating idea is an idea or statement whose falsehood is a logical consequence of the act or situation of holding them to be true. Many ideas are called self-refuting by their detractors, and such accusations are therefore almost always controversial, with defenders stating that the idea is being misunderstood or that the argument is invalid. For these reasons, none of the ideas below are unambiguously or incontrovertibly self-refuting. These ideas are often used as axioms, which are definitions taken to be true (tautological assumptions), and cannot be used to test themselves, for doing so would lead to only two consequences: consistency (circular reasoning) or exception (self-contradiction).

Variations edit

Directly self-denying statements edit

Directly self-denying statements are characterised by being necessarily (or inherently) false.[1] The Epimenides paradox is a statement of the form "this statement is false". Such statements troubled philosophers, especially when there was a serious attempt to formalize the foundations of logic. Bertrand Russell developed his "Theory of Types" to formalize a set of rules that would prevent such statements (more formally Russell's paradox) being made in symbolic logic.[2] This work has led to the modern formulation of axiomatic set theory. While Russell's formalization did not contain such paradoxes, Kurt Gödel showed that it must contain independent statements. Any logical system that is rich enough to contain elementary arithmetic contains at least one proposition whose interpretation is this proposition is unprovable (from within the logical system concerned), and hence no such system can be both complete and consistent.

Indirectly self-denying statements edit

One form of an indirect self-denying statement is the "Stolen Concept": the act of using a concept while ignoring, contradicting or denying the validity of the concepts on which it logically and/or genetically depends. The idea of the "Stolen Concept" is generally attributed to be first noted by Ayn Rand and then later supported by followers of Objectivism. Much like Objectivism the idea of the "Stolen Concept" does not have mainstream acceptance in academia.[3] An example of the stolen concept fallacy is anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's statement, "All property is theft".

While discussing the hierarchical nature of knowledge, Nathaniel Branden states, "Theft" is a concept that logically and genetically depends on the antecedent concept of "rightfully owned property"—and refers to the act of taking that property without the owner's consent. If no property is rightfully owned, that is, if nothing is property, there can be no such concept as "theft." Thus, the statement "All property is theft" has an internal contradiction: to use the concept "theft" while denying the validity of the concept of "property," is to use "theft" as a concept to which one has no logical right—that is, as a stolen concept.[4]

Others have said the statement is fallacious only on a superficial reading of Proudhon, devoid of context. Proudhon used the term "property" with reference to claimed ownership in land, factories, etc. He believed such claims were illegitimate, and thus a form of theft from the commons.[5] Proudhon explicitly states that the phrase "property is theft" is analogous to the phrase "slavery is murder". According to Proudhon, the slave, though biologically alive, is clearly in a sense "murdered". The "theft" in his terminology does not refer to ownership any more than the "murder" refers directly to physiological death, but rather both are meant as terms to represent a denial of specific rights.[6]

In logic edit

Self-refutation plays an important role in some inconsistency tolerant logics (e.g. paraconsistent logics and direct logic[7]) that lack proof by contradiction. For example, the negation of a proposition can be proved by showing that the proposition implies its own negation. Likewise, it can be inferred that a proposition cannot be proved by (1) showing that a proof would imply the negation of the proposition or by (2) showing a proof would imply that the negation of the proposition can be proved.[citation needed]

Examples edit

Brain in a vat edit

Brain in a vat is a thought experiment in philosophy which is premised upon the skeptical hypothesis that one could actually be a brain in a vat receiving electrical input identical to that which would be coming from the nervous system. Similar premises are found in Descartes's evil demon and dream argument. Philosopher Hilary Putnam argues that some versions of the thought experiment would be inconsistent due to semantic externalism. For a brain in a vat that had only ever experienced the simulated world, the statement "I'm not a brain in a vat" is true. The only possible brains and vats it could be referring to are simulated, and it is true that it is not a simulated brain in a simulated vat. By the same argument, saying "I'm a brain in a vat" would be false.[8]

Determinism edit

It has been argued by advocates of libertarian free will that to call determinism a rational statement is doubly self-defeating.[9]

  1. To count as rational, a belief must be freely chosen, which according to the determinist is impossible
  2. Any kind of debate seems to be posited on the idea that the parties involved are trying to change each other's minds.

Ethical egoism edit

It has been argued that extreme ethical egoism is self-defeating. Faced with a situation of limited resources, egoists would consume as much of the resource as they could, making the overall situation worse for everybody. Egoists may respond that if the situation becomes worse for everybody, the egoist will also be negatively placed, such that it is not, in fact, in the egoist's rational self-interest to take things to such extremes.[10] However, the (unregulated) tragedy of the commons and the (one-off) prisoner's dilemma are cases in which, on the one hand, it is rational for an individual to seek to take as much as possible even though to do so makes things worse for everybody,[clarification needed], and on the other hand, the behaviour remains rational even though it is ultimately self-defeating. That is to say, in these cases self-defeating does not imply self-refuting. Egoists might respond that a tragedy of the commons assumes some degree of public land; that is, a commons forbidding homesteading requires regulation. Thus, an argument against the tragedy of the commons, in this belief system, is fundamentally an argument for private property rights and the system that recognizes both property rights and rational self-interest: capitalism.[11]

More generally, egoists might say that an increasing respect for individual rights uniquely allows for increasing wealth creation and increasing usable resources despite a fixed amount of raw materials (e.g., the West pre-1776 versus post-1776, East Germany versus West Germany, Hong Kong versus mainland China, North Korea versus South Korea, etc.).[12]

Eliminative materialism edit

The philosopher Mary Midgley states that the idea that nothing exists except matter is also self-refuting because if it were true neither it, nor any other idea, would exist, and similarly that an argument to that effect would be self-refuting because it would deny its own existence.[13][page needed] Several other philosophers also argue that eliminative materialism is self-refuting.[14][page needed][15][16]

However, other forms of materialism may escape this kind of argument because, rather than eliminating the mental, they seek to identify it with, or reduce it to, the material.[17] For instance, identity theorists such as J. J. C. Smart, Ullin Place and E. G. Boring state that ideas exist materially as patterns of neural structure and activity.[18][19] Christian apologist J.P. Moreland states that such arguments are based on semantics.[20][page needed]

Evolutionary naturalism edit

Alvin Plantinga argues in his evolutionary argument against naturalism that the combination of naturalism and evolution is "in a certain interesting way self-defeating" because if it were true there would be insufficient grounds to believe that human cognitive faculties are reliable.[21][page needed] Consequently, if human cognitive abilities are unreliable, then any human construct, which by implication utilizes cognitive faculties, such as evolutionary theory, would be undermined. In this particular case, it is the confluence of evolutionary theory and naturalism that, according to the argument, undermine the reason for believing themselves to be true. Since Plantinga originally formulated the argument, a few theistic philosophers and Christian apologists have agreed.[22][23][page needed] There has also been a considerable backlash of papers arguing that the argument is flawed in a number of ways, one of the more recent ones published in 2011 by Feng Ye[24] (see also the references in the Evolutionary argument against naturalism article).

Foundationalism edit

The philosopher Anthony Kenny argues that the idea, "common to theists like Aquinas and Descartes and to an atheist like Russell" that "Rational belief [is] either self-evident or based directly or indirectly on what is evident" (which he termed "foundationalism" following Plantinga) is self-refuting on the basis that this idea is itself neither self-evident nor based directly or indirectly on what is evident and that the same applies to other formulations of such foundationalism.[25] However, the self-evident impossibility of infinite regress can be offered as a justification for foundationalism.[26] Following the identification of problems with "naive foundationalism", the term is now often used to focus on incorrigible beliefs (modern foundationalism), or basic beliefs (reformed foundationalism).

Philosophical skepticism edit

Philosophical skeptics state that "nothing can be known".[27] This has caused some to ask if nothing can be known then can that statement itself be known, or is it self-refuting.[28] One very old response to this problem is academic skepticism:[29] an exception is made for the skeptic's own statement. This leads to further debate about consistency and special pleading.

Relativism edit

It is often stated that relativism about truth must be applied to itself.[30][31] The cruder form of the argument concludes that since the relativist is calling relativism an absolute truth, it leads to a contradiction. Relativists often rejoin that in fact relativism is only relatively true, leading to a subtler problem: the absolutist, the relativist's opponent, is perfectly entitled, by the relativist's own standards, to reject relativism. That is, the relativist's arguments can have no normative force over someone who has different basic beliefs.[32]

Verification and falsification principles edit

The statements "statements are meaningless unless they can be empirically verified" and "statements are meaningless unless they can be empirically falsified" have both been called self-refuting on the basis that they can neither be empirically verified nor falsified.[33] Similar arguments have been made for statements such as "no statements are true unless they can be shown empirically to be true", which was a problem for logical positivism.[34]

Moderation In All Things edit

The perhaps ancient, proverbial saying "all things in moderation" is itself a call to excess in that it commands moderation in every single possible thing. An actually moderate assertion would be something like "most things in moderation" or more precisely, "a moderate number of things in moderation." However, many philosophers use the saying in the context of ethics.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "JP Moreland's Web » Why Strong Scientism is Self-Refuting".
  2. ^ Russell B, Whitehead A.N., Principia Mathematica
  3. ^ Kraft, Rory E. (2019). "Stolen Concept". In Arp, Robert; Barbone, Steven; Bruce, Michael (eds.). Bad Arguments: 100 of the Most Important Fallacies in Western Philosophy (1st ed.). WILEY Blackwell. pp. 388–391. ISBN 9781119167907.
  4. ^ The Stolen Concept 2007-05-01 at the Wayback Machine by Nathaniel Branden - originally published in The Objectivist Newsletter in January 1963.
  5. ^ Rockwell, L. Performative Contradictions and Subtle Misunderstandings
  6. ^ Proudhon. "What is Property? Proudhon 1840". www.marxists.org. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  7. ^ Hewitt, C. “Large-scale Organizational Computing requires Unstratified Reflection and Strong Paraconsistency” Coordination, Organizations, Institutions, and Norms in Agent Systems III Jaime Sichman, Pablo Noriega, Julian Padget and Sascha Ossowski (ed.). Springer-Verlag. 2008.
  8. ^ Brains in a vat, Reason, Truth, and History ch. 1, Hilary Putnam
  9. ^ "Determinism". Determinism is self-defeating. A determinist insists that both determinists and non-determinists are determined to believe what they believe. However, determinists believe self-determinists are wrong and ought to change their view. But "ought to change" implies they are free to change, which, within the incompatibilist view, is contrary to determinism.
  10. ^ "Ethics" Britannica.
  11. ^ Walter Block (1998). "Environmentalism and Economic Freedom: The Case for Private Property Rights (Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 17, No. 16 (Dec., 1998), pp. 1887-1899)". Journal of Business Ethics. 17 (16): 1887–1899. doi:10.1023/A:1005941908758. JSTOR 25074025. S2CID 17655955.
  12. ^ Julian Simon. "The Ultimate Resource II: People, Materials, and Environment (1996)". Retrieved 2014-03-14.
  13. ^ See Mary Midgley The Myths we Live by.
  14. ^ Baker, L. (1987). Saving Belief. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-07320-0.
  15. ^ Reppert, V. (1992). "Eliminative Materialism, Cognitive Suicide, and Begging the Question". Metaphilosophy. 23 (4): 378–392. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9973.1992.tb00550.x.
  16. ^ Boghossian, P. (1990). "The Status of Content". Philosophical Review. 99 (2): 157–184. doi:10.2307/2185488. JSTOR 2185488. And — (1991). "The Status of Content Revisited" (PDF). Pacific Philosophical Quarterly. 71 (4): 264–278. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0114.1990.tb00404.x. hdl:2027.42/138325.
  17. ^ Hill, C. "Identity Theory" (PDF).
  18. ^ Place, U. T. "Identity Theories". In Nanni, Marco (ed.). A Field Guide to the Philosophy of Mind. Società italiana per la filosofia analitica. To the author a perfect correlation is identity. Two events that always occur together at the same time in the same place, without any temporal or spatial differentiation at all, are not two events but the same event. The mind-body correlations as formulated at present, do not admit of spatial correlation, so they reduce to matters of simple correlation in time. The need for identification is no less urgent in this case.
  19. ^ "Dictionary of the Philosophy of Mind".
  20. ^ Moreland, J.P., The Recalcitrant Imago Dei: Human Persons and the Failure of Naturalism.
  21. ^ Alvin Plantinga in Naturalism Defeated?, Ed. James Beilby Cornell University Press, 2002.
  22. ^ John Polkinghorne is an example of a scientist-theologian who is supportive of Plantinga's position.
  23. ^ Richard Swinburne is a philosopher that supports and utilizes Plantinga's argument effectively in his book "The Existence of God".
  24. ^ "NaturalizedTruthAndPlantinga - Feng Ye's Homepage". sites.google.com. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  25. ^ Kenny, Anthony (1992). What is Faith?. Oxford: OUP. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-0-19-283067-8. This particular chapter is based on a 1982 lecture which may explain the shift in the meaning of the term "foundationalism" since then.
  26. ^ Hasan, Ali; Fumerton, Richard (11 March 2018). Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. Retrieved 11 March 2018 – via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 December 2005. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  28. ^ Suber, P. Classical Skepticism.
  29. ^ "Cicero: Academic Skepticism - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy". www.iep.utm.edu. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  30. ^ "Cognitive Relativism - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy". www.iep.utm.edu. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  31. ^ The problem of self-refutation is quite general. It arises whether truth is relativized to a framework of concepts, of beliefs, of standards, of practices. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  32. ^ "If truth is relative, then non-relativist points of view can legitimately claim to be true relative to some standpoints." Westacott, E. On the Motivations for Relativism.
  33. ^ See e.g. the discussion by Alston, William P. (2003). "Religious language and verificationism". In Moser, Paul K.; Copan, Paul (eds.). The Rationality of Theism. New York: Routledge. pp. 26–34. ISBN 978-0-415-26332-0.
  34. ^ See e.g. Keith Ward, Is Religion Dangerous? p. 86.

self, refuting, idea, self, refuting, idea, self, defeating, idea, idea, statement, whose, falsehood, logical, consequence, situation, holding, them, true, many, ideas, called, self, refuting, their, detractors, such, accusations, therefore, almost, always, co. A self refuting idea or self defeating idea is an idea or statement whose falsehood is a logical consequence of the act or situation of holding them to be true Many ideas are called self refuting by their detractors and such accusations are therefore almost always controversial with defenders stating that the idea is being misunderstood or that the argument is invalid For these reasons none of the ideas below are unambiguously or incontrovertibly self refuting These ideas are often used as axioms which are definitions taken to be true tautological assumptions and cannot be used to test themselves for doing so would lead to only two consequences consistency circular reasoning or exception self contradiction Contents 1 Variations 1 1 Directly self denying statements 1 2 Indirectly self denying statements 1 3 In logic 2 Examples 2 1 Brain in a vat 2 2 Determinism 2 3 Ethical egoism 2 4 Eliminative materialism 2 5 Evolutionary naturalism 2 6 Foundationalism 2 7 Philosophical skepticism 2 8 Relativism 2 9 Verification and falsification principles 2 10 Moderation In All Things 3 See also 4 ReferencesVariations editDirectly self denying statements edit Directly self denying statements are characterised by being necessarily or inherently false 1 The Epimenides paradox is a statement of the form this statement is false Such statements troubled philosophers especially when there was a serious attempt to formalize the foundations of logic Bertrand Russell developed his Theory of Types to formalize a set of rules that would prevent such statements more formally Russell s paradox being made in symbolic logic 2 This work has led to the modern formulation of axiomatic set theory While Russell s formalization did not contain such paradoxes Kurt Godel showed that it must contain independent statements Any logical system that is rich enough to contain elementary arithmetic contains at least one proposition whose interpretation is this proposition is unprovable from within the logical system concerned and hence no such system can be both complete and consistent Indirectly self denying statements edit This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section may lend undue weight to Objectivism on the basis of WP FRINGE particularly the inclusion of the quotation The idea of arguments that indirectly defeat themselves is a common one in academic philosophy and although the fallacy of the stolen concept deserves mention it should not dominate the section Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message May 2022 This section may primarily relate to a different subject or place undue weight on a particular aspect rather than the subject as a whole Specifically most of this section is concerned with possible responses to the specific example used by the Objectivist argument but these are not relevant Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message One form of an indirect self denying statement is the Stolen Concept the act of using a concept while ignoring contradicting or denying the validity of the concepts on which it logically and or genetically depends The idea of the Stolen Concept is generally attributed to be first noted by Ayn Rand and then later supported by followers of Objectivism Much like Objectivism the idea of the Stolen Concept does not have mainstream acceptance in academia 3 An example of the stolen concept fallacy is anarchist Pierre Joseph Proudhon s statement All property is theft While discussing the hierarchical nature of knowledge Nathaniel Branden states Theft is a concept that logically and genetically depends on the antecedent concept of rightfully owned property and refers to the act of taking that property without the owner s consent If no property is rightfully owned that is if nothing is property there can be no such concept as theft Thus the statement All property is theft has an internal contradiction to use the concept theft while denying the validity of the concept of property is to use theft as a concept to which one has no logical right that is as a stolen concept 4 Others have said the statement is fallacious only on a superficial reading of Proudhon devoid of context Proudhon used the term property with reference to claimed ownership in land factories etc He believed such claims were illegitimate and thus a form of theft from the commons 5 Proudhon explicitly states that the phrase property is theft is analogous to the phrase slavery is murder According to Proudhon the slave though biologically alive is clearly in a sense murdered The theft in his terminology does not refer to ownership any more than the murder refers directly to physiological death but rather both are meant as terms to represent a denial of specific rights 6 In logic edit Self refutation plays an important role in some inconsistency tolerant logics e g paraconsistent logics and direct logic 7 that lack proof by contradiction For example the negation of a proposition can be proved by showing that the proposition implies its own negation Likewise it can be inferred that a proposition cannot be proved by 1 showing that a proof would imply the negation of the proposition or by 2 showing a proof would imply that the negation of the proposition can be proved citation needed Examples editThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message Brain in a vat edit Brain in a vat is a thought experiment in philosophy which is premised upon the skeptical hypothesis that one could actually be a brain in a vat receiving electrical input identical to that which would be coming from the nervous system Similar premises are found in Descartes s evil demon and dream argument Philosopher Hilary Putnam argues that some versions of the thought experiment would be inconsistent due to semantic externalism For a brain in a vat that had only ever experienced the simulated world the statement I m not a brain in a vat is true The only possible brains and vats it could be referring to are simulated and it is true that it is not a simulated brain in a simulated vat By the same argument saying I m a brain in a vat would be false 8 Determinism edit It has been argued by advocates of libertarian free will that to call determinism a rational statement is doubly self defeating 9 To count as rational a belief must be freely chosen which according to the determinist is impossible Any kind of debate seems to be posited on the idea that the parties involved are trying to change each other s minds Ethical egoism edit It has been argued that extreme ethical egoism is self defeating Faced with a situation of limited resources egoists would consume as much of the resource as they could making the overall situation worse for everybody Egoists may respond that if the situation becomes worse for everybody the egoist will also be negatively placed such that it is not in fact in the egoist s rational self interest to take things to such extremes 10 However the unregulated tragedy of the commons and the one off prisoner s dilemma are cases in which on the one hand it is rational for an individual to seek to take as much as possible even though to do so makes things worse for everybody clarification needed and on the other hand the behaviour remains rational even though it is ultimately self defeating That is to say in these cases self defeating does not imply self refuting Egoists might respond that a tragedy of the commons assumes some degree of public land that is a commons forbidding homesteading requires regulation Thus an argument against the tragedy of the commons in this belief system is fundamentally an argument for private property rights and the system that recognizes both property rights and rational self interest capitalism 11 More generally egoists might say that an increasing respect for individual rights uniquely allows for increasing wealth creation and increasing usable resources despite a fixed amount of raw materials e g the West pre 1776 versus post 1776 East Germany versus West Germany Hong Kong versus mainland China North Korea versus South Korea etc 12 Eliminative materialism edit The philosopher Mary Midgley states that the idea that nothing exists except matter is also self refuting because if it were true neither it nor any other idea would exist and similarly that an argument to that effect would be self refuting because it would deny its own existence 13 page needed Several other philosophers also argue that eliminative materialism is self refuting 14 page needed 15 16 However other forms of materialism may escape this kind of argument because rather than eliminating the mental they seek to identify it with or reduce it to the material 17 For instance identity theorists such as J J C Smart Ullin Place and E G Boring state that ideas exist materially as patterns of neural structure and activity 18 19 Christian apologist J P Moreland states that such arguments are based on semantics 20 page needed Evolutionary naturalism edit Alvin Plantinga argues in his evolutionary argument against naturalism that the combination of naturalism and evolution is in a certain interesting way self defeating because if it were true there would be insufficient grounds to believe that human cognitive faculties are reliable 21 page needed Consequently if human cognitive abilities are unreliable then any human construct which by implication utilizes cognitive faculties such as evolutionary theory would be undermined In this particular case it is the confluence of evolutionary theory and naturalism that according to the argument undermine the reason for believing themselves to be true Since Plantinga originally formulated the argument a few theistic philosophers and Christian apologists have agreed 22 23 page needed There has also been a considerable backlash of papers arguing that the argument is flawed in a number of ways one of the more recent ones published in 2011 by Feng Ye 24 see also the references in the Evolutionary argument against naturalism article Foundationalism edit The philosopher Anthony Kenny argues that the idea common to theists like Aquinas and Descartes and to an atheist like Russell that Rational belief is either self evident or based directly or indirectly on what is evident which he termed foundationalism following Plantinga is self refuting on the basis that this idea is itself neither self evident nor based directly or indirectly on what is evident and that the same applies to other formulations of such foundationalism 25 However the self evident impossibility of infinite regress can be offered as a justification for foundationalism 26 Following the identification of problems with naive foundationalism the term is now often used to focus on incorrigible beliefs modern foundationalism or basic beliefs reformed foundationalism Philosophical skepticism edit Philosophical skeptics state that nothing can be known 27 This has caused some to ask if nothing can be known then can that statement itself be known or is it self refuting 28 One very old response to this problem is academic skepticism 29 an exception is made for the skeptic s own statement This leads to further debate about consistency and special pleading Relativism edit It is often stated that relativism about truth must be applied to itself 30 31 The cruder form of the argument concludes that since the relativist is calling relativism an absolute truth it leads to a contradiction Relativists often rejoin that in fact relativism is only relatively true leading to a subtler problem the absolutist the relativist s opponent is perfectly entitled by the relativist s own standards to reject relativism That is the relativist s arguments can have no normative force over someone who has different basic beliefs 32 Verification and falsification principles edit The statements statements are meaningless unless they can be empirically verified and statements are meaningless unless they can be empirically falsified have both been called self refuting on the basis that they can neither be empirically verified nor falsified 33 Similar arguments have been made for statements such as no statements are true unless they can be shown empirically to be true which was a problem for logical positivism 34 Moderation In All Things edit The perhaps ancient proverbial saying all things in moderation is itself a call to excess in that it commands moderation in every single possible thing An actually moderate assertion would be something like most things in moderation or more precisely a moderate number of things in moderation However many philosophers use the saying in the context of ethics See also editPeritrope Paradox Performative contradiction Self defeating prophecyReferences edit JP Moreland s Web Why Strong Scientism is Self Refuting Russell B Whitehead A N Principia Mathematica Kraft Rory E 2019 Stolen Concept In Arp Robert Barbone Steven Bruce Michael eds Bad Arguments 100 of the Most Important Fallacies in Western Philosophy 1st ed WILEY Blackwell pp 388 391 ISBN 9781119167907 The Stolen Concept Archived 2007 05 01 at the Wayback Machine by Nathaniel Branden originally published in The Objectivist Newsletter in January 1963 Rockwell L Performative Contradictions and Subtle Misunderstandings Proudhon What is Property Proudhon 1840 www marxists org Retrieved 11 March 2018 Hewitt C Large scale Organizational Computing requires Unstratified Reflection and Strong Paraconsistency Coordination Organizations Institutions and Norms in Agent Systems III Jaime Sichman Pablo Noriega Julian Padget and Sascha Ossowski ed Springer Verlag 2008 Brains in a vat Reason Truth and History ch 1 Hilary Putnam Determinism Determinism is self defeating A determinist insists that both determinists and non determinists are determined to believe what they believe However determinists believe self determinists are wrong and ought to change their view But ought to change implies they are free to change which within the incompatibilist view is contrary to determinism Ethics Britannica Walter Block 1998 Environmentalism and Economic Freedom The Case for Private Property Rights Journal of Business Ethics Vol 17 No 16 Dec 1998 pp 1887 1899 Journal of Business Ethics 17 16 1887 1899 doi 10 1023 A 1005941908758 JSTOR 25074025 S2CID 17655955 Julian Simon The Ultimate Resource II People Materials and Environment 1996 Retrieved 2014 03 14 See Mary Midgley The Myths we Live by Baker L 1987 Saving Belief Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 07320 0 Reppert V 1992 Eliminative Materialism Cognitive Suicide and Begging the Question Metaphilosophy 23 4 378 392 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9973 1992 tb00550 x Boghossian P 1990 The Status of Content Philosophical Review 99 2 157 184 doi 10 2307 2185488 JSTOR 2185488 And 1991 The Status of Content Revisited PDF Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 71 4 264 278 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0114 1990 tb00404 x hdl 2027 42 138325 Hill C Identity Theory PDF Place U T Identity Theories In Nanni Marco ed A Field Guide to the Philosophy of Mind Societa italiana per la filosofia analitica To the author a perfect correlation is identity Two events that always occur together at the same time in the same place without any temporal or spatial differentiation at all are not two events but the same event The mind body correlations as formulated at present do not admit of spatial correlation so they reduce to matters of simple correlation in time The need for identification is no less urgent in this case Dictionary of the Philosophy of Mind Moreland J P The Recalcitrant Imago Dei Human Persons and the Failure of Naturalism Alvin Plantinga in Naturalism Defeated Ed James Beilby Cornell University Press 2002 John Polkinghorne is an example of a scientist theologian who is supportive of Plantinga s position Richard Swinburne is a philosopher that supports and utilizes Plantinga s argument effectively in his book The Existence of God NaturalizedTruthAndPlantinga Feng Ye s Homepage sites google com Retrieved 11 March 2018 Kenny Anthony 1992 What is Faith Oxford OUP pp 9 10 ISBN 978 0 19 283067 8 This particular chapter is based on a 1982 lecture which may explain the shift in the meaning of the term foundationalism since then Hasan Ali Fumerton Richard 11 March 2018 Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 11 March 2018 via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The Gallilean Library Archived from the original on 22 December 2005 Retrieved 11 March 2018 Suber P Classical Skepticism Cicero Academic Skepticism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy www iep utm edu Retrieved 11 March 2018 Cognitive Relativism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy www iep utm edu Retrieved 11 March 2018 The problem of self refutation is quite general It arises whether truth is relativized to a framework of concepts of beliefs of standards of practices Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy If truth is relative then non relativist points of view can legitimately claim to be true relative to some standpoints Westacott E On the Motivations for Relativism See e g the discussion by Alston William P 2003 Religious language and verificationism In Moser Paul K Copan Paul eds The Rationality of Theism New York Routledge pp 26 34 ISBN 978 0 415 26332 0 See e g Keith Ward Is Religion Dangerous p 86 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Self refuting idea amp oldid 1195500891, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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