4 ideas
22520 | You can't reason someone out of an irrational opinion [Swift] |
Full Idea: Reasoning will never make a man correct an ill opinion, which by reasoning he never acquired. | |
From: Jonathan Swift (Letters to a Young Clergyman [1720]) | |
A reaction: It would be hard to prove this, and someone full of irrational beliefs may have their rationality awakened by a sound argument. Nice remark, but too pessimistic. |
6408 | Russell needed three extra axioms to reduce maths to logic: infinity, choice and reducibility [Grayling] |
Full Idea: In order to deduce the theorems of mathematics from purely logical axioms, Russell had to add three new axioms to those of standards logic, which were: the axiom of infinity, the axiom of choice, and the axiom of reducibility. | |
From: A.C. Grayling (Russell [1996], Ch.2) | |
A reaction: The third one was adopted to avoid his 'barber' paradox, but many thinkers do not accept it. The interesting question is why anyone would 'accept' or 'reject' an axiom. |
6414 | Two propositions might seem self-evident, but contradict one another [Grayling] |
Full Idea: Two propositions might contradict each other despite appearing self-evident when considered separately. | |
From: A.C. Grayling (Russell [1996], Ch.2) | |
A reaction: Russell's proposal (Idea 5416) is important here, that self-evidence comes in degrees. If self-evidence was all-or-nothing, Grayling's point would be a major problem, but it isn't. Bonjour explores the idea more fully (e.g. Idea 3704) |
19399 | Prime matter is nothing when it is at rest [Leibniz] |
Full Idea: Primary matter is nothing if considered at rest. | |
From: Gottfried Leibniz (Aristotle and Descartes on Matter [1671], p.90) | |
A reaction: This goes with Leibniz's Idea 13393, that activity is the hallmark of existence. No one seems to have been able to make good sense of prime matter, and it plays little role in Aristotle's writings. |