So, except with respect to my longing for convergence, we agree.  See larding 
below :

Nicholas Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology
Clark University
[email protected]
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/
 


-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of u?l? ???
Sent: Tuesday, December 1, 2020 1:21 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] New ways of understanding the world

But you said "we may hope to discover and agree upon fundamental principles 
underlying all logics". I was simply checking that and saying I neither hope 
for that, nor believe it possible.[NST===>I both hope for it and believe it is 
ultimately possible.  Most of all, I believe that that faith is essential 
inquiry.  This is here e disagree? <===nst]   

And the important part of what I expressed was that logic does NOT depend on 
what we're talking about. It is referent-independent. No semiotic object is 
necessary. Only the sign and the interpretant are necessary. The object ... the 
"checkin with the world" is necessary for reason, but not logic. And reason 
relies on logic, but is not limited to it.
[NST===>Oh, gosh, I guess we do disagree here, too.  But I think you disagree 
with yourself.  If all logics are relative as applied, what could they possibly 
be relative TO other than content?? <===nst]

And a third point is that it is NOT subject to any kind of in the long run 
convergence. Logics are games. They are set up and played and none of them will 
ever go away. You or I may get bored of one or the other. But they'll all still 
have their place.
[NST===>And what exactly is their place?<===nst] 

Did you answer my question about birth order? I am preparing an ad hominem 
argument I and I need some data.  

[NST===>Nick<===nst] 

On 12/1/20 11:08 AM, [email protected] wrote:
> But Glen, I am an anti-foundationalist, too.  I never asserted that 
> logic was the foundation of anything.  It is subject to the same pragmaticist 
> [/sensu Peirceae/] evaluations that are the fate of any conception.  It, like 
> everything else, is the result of accumulations of pattern in experience.  It 
> is a midden, not a foundation.



> On 12/1/20 9:15 AM, [email protected] wrote:
>> I stipulate that there are many logics.  Certainly as many logics as there 
>> are maths.  So, what is true of all “logics”?   A logic is a proposed set of 
>> principles of right thinking. Thinking is “right” when it leads to 
>> expectations that prove out in the long run.  What thinking is “right” 
>> depends on what one  is thinking about.  Some logic’s are more basic, more 
>> universal than others.  In the very long run, we may hope to discover and 
>> agree upon fundamental principles underlying all logics, a logic of logics, 
>> if you ill. But for the foreseeable future what argument is logical will 
>> depend on what we are talking about.  

--
↙↙↙ uǝlƃ

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