Hume’s is-ought, Plato’s true-justified, Euthyphro’s dilemma and Gettier’s problem

Hume‘s is-ought (fact-value) distinction is the same as Plato‘s true-justified distinction.  When is/true/fact and ought/justified/value are not kept distinct, the Euthyphro dilemma as applied to epistemology ensues:  Are we justified in believing (ought we believe) merely because our belief is true (can truth justify belief without evidence?), or is our belief true because we are justified in believing (because we ought to believe)(does evidence make belief true?)?

The solution:  Our belief is 1) justified (we ought to believe) by the evidence, and 2) true by correspondenceGettier’s problem examples, though meant to challenge Plato‘s justified-true-belief theory of knowledge, show that just because a belief is true (is), does not make it justified (ought), and just because a belief is justified (ought), does not make it true (is).  Gettier’s problem and Euthyphro’s dilemma only arise when we get is/true and ought/justified tangled together (Hume’s is-ought problem), when we forget to keep them distinct, as Plato kept them in his requirement that belief be “both” justified “and” true, in order to count as knowledge.

Draw a Venn diagram. In the top circle write, “What we want to be true,” in the bottom left circle write, “What we acknowledge is true,” and in the bottom right circle write, “What we recognize is true.”

[Note on belief scales:  There can be degrees of justification, but truth is either/or.  This means that beliefs cannot be “more or less” true (known), only “more or less” justified (believed)–that is why apisticism (lack of belief) is the mid-range (or ‘on the equator’) between polar beliefs (like atheism/theism), not agnosticism (lack of knowledge, as a conclusion–as opposed to Huxley’s process of questioning, pre-conclusion).]

Relevant posts which go into more detail on the above:
The New, New Theism
Replacing Agnosticism with Apisticism
Is-ought fallacy and knowledge as justified-true-belief
Norris, Gettier, Euthyphro, Hume and Plato: Is knowledge justified true belief?
Answering Gettier
Atheism and agnosticism (really, apisticism) as belief
Natural law, divine command and Euthyphro’s dilemma resolved using Hume’s is-ought distinction

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Notes: Deuteronomy 11

Deuteronomy 11

Bible Narrative Project

A preview of how awesome the land is that they will be entering, how awesome things will be for them if they stay under the Lord’s wing, and how not awesome they will be if they don’t.

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Notes: Deuteronomy 8-10

Deuteronomy 8-10

Bible Narrative Project

Moses reminds Israel how God helped them, how they provoked him but he loved them anyway and they are to do the same.

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Notes: Deuteronomy 5-7

Deuteronomy 5-7

Bible Narrative Project

What would you tell your children if they had to go on through the rest of your life without you? That is what Moses is doing here. He is repeating the 10 Commandments, he is reminding them of how God used him to rescue them out of Egypt and be God’s prophet for them so they would not be terrified. He is reminding them that God loved them not because of anything they did or how awesome they were, because they weren’t awesome. He is warning them to stick close to God. He is reminding them of God’s promises and that he will keep them.

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Notes: Deuteronomy 3-4

Deuteronomy 3-4

Bible Narrative Project

The history review is caught up to the then-present and Israel is urged to obey the God who brought them out of Egypt. “But from there you will seek the Lord your God, and you will find Him if you search for Him with all your heart and all your soul.” (Deut. 4:29)

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Notes: Deuteronomy 1-2

Deuteronomy 1-2

Bible Narrative Project

So Deuteronomy is a grand pause before moving forward in conquest under Joshua. It is the last doings and words of Moses. He is blessing Israel and renewing their covenant with God as he began it at Sinai. The summary from Egypt to Jordan in Numbers 33 is given flesh in Deut. 1-3, but at the end of 2 we stop at Sihon.

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Numbers 35-36

Numbers 35-36

Bible Narrative Project

Part of divying up the land includes where the Levites will live, since they don’t get their own land like the other tribes. They will be spread out through the land in 48 cities, 6 of which will be cities of refuge for the ‘manslayer’ to flee to from revenge killing (though he may not get off Scot-free). Relevant to this whole passage is Joshua 20 and 21.

The last chapter of Numbers revisits the earlier issue in chapter 27 of daughters who have no brothers–it is decided that one should only marry within one’s own tribe, so that land will not pass between tribes. Despite all the rebellion mentioned in Numbers, it ends on a happy note–Zelophehad’s daughters comply. (But…they marry their cousins…eweth.)

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Notes: Numbers 33-34

Numbers 33-34

Bible Narrative Project

Now that Joshua is good to go, Midian is taken care of, and they are set to take Canaan, it is time for a quick review (from Egypt to Jordan) and some ground-rules for how to divy up the land they are about to conquer. The places listed in the review are 40, suggesting some styling in the list which is a religious summary of the Lord’s blessing through their wilderness experience.

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Atheism and agnosticism (really, apisticism) as belief

First I will grant that agnosticism (a better word for this being ‘apisticism’) is neutral in order to make the claim that atheism is a belief because it lacks the neutrality of apisticism. Then I will challenge the neutrality of apisticism by arguing out that to claim to be apistic once one has examined the evidence, is to (in bad faith) be no longer neutral, so that both claims—to be atheist, or to be apistic—reflect belief.

I. Negative belief is belief nonetheless

A common claim of many atheists is that atheism is not a belief, but a lack of one. However, a lack of belief in either a theist or atheist direction is apisticism (a lack of knowledge is agnosticism)—someone who lacks belief about god(s) believes neither that god(s) exists (theism), nor that no god(s) exists (atheism). So to claim the title ‘atheist’ is to believe there are no god(s) (positive belief) at the same time one disbelieves in the existence of god(s) (negative belief). Negative belief is belief nonetheless. As mentioned in the 115th Philosophers’ Carnival, Sam Harris writes in “The Moral Landscape” that, according to his doctoral research, belief and disbelief both “showed highly localized signal changes in the caudate” (p. 226, note 35)—it’s because disbelief is a manifestation of belief. Here is a simple way to display this:

Let it be assumed that “the existence of god(s)” is x, and “the nonexistence of god(s)” is y. x is not-y, and y is not-x.

Atheism is both:
Positive belief: I believe in the non-existence of god(s). I believe in y (or, I believe in not-x).
Negative belief: I do not believe in the existence of god(s). I do not believe in x (or, I do not believe in not-y).

Theism is both:
Positive belief: I believe in the existence of God(s). I believe in x (or, I believe in not-y).
Negative belief: I do not believe in the non-existence of God(s). I do not believe in y (or, I do not believe in not-x).

Apisticism is none of the above. “I don’t believe either way—I don’t believe in the existence of god(s) and I don’t believe in the non-existence of God(s).” “I believe in ~x and ~y,” which is equivalent to “I do not believe in x or y”.

There are positive and negative aspects to every belief, whether or not it is an “ism”. For example…

Let it be assumed that “the sun will rise” is x, and “the sun will not rise” is y. As before, x is ~y, y is ~x.

The Sun Will Rise
Positive: I believe the sun will rise. I believe x (or, I believe ~y).
Negative: I do not believe the sun will not rise. I do not believe y (or, I do not believe ~x).

The Sun Will Not Rise
Positive: I believe the sun will not rise. I believe y (or, I believe ~x).
Negative: I do not believe the sun will rise. I do not believe x (or, I do not believe ~y).

Apisticism is none of the above. “I don’t believe either way—I don’t believe the sun will not rise, but I don’t believe the sun will rise, either.” “I believe ~x and ~y,” which is equivalent to “I do not believe x or y”.

When we doubt a certain belief, it is because we think its alternative holds some weight—we kinda already believe (positive belief) the alternative belief, and kinda already disbelieve (negative belief) our current one. To disbelieve is to believe the alternative. If an atheist truly lacked belief either way, they would not claim to be an atheist, but would instead claim to be apistic (more commonly mislabelled agnostic).

When there is enough evidence in to make a decision, there is a sense in which apisticism can be a case of “choosing not to choose,” which Sartre called “bad faith”.

II. Agnosticism (really, apisticism) as belief

First discussed was the issue of atheism as belief, objecting that if someone is truly neutral on the existence of god(s), s/he is actually agnostic (again, a better word for this is ‘apistic’), neither theist, nor atheist. However, also discussed was that there is a point at which apisticism amounts to bad faith. This section will focus on this, adding that one can only be apistic about the existence of god(s) if one does not ‘claim’ to be either atheist, theist or apistic. Once one makes a claim, one is no longer neutral.

Theists who have reasons for their belief say that there is enough good evidence that atheists and skeptics fail to critically examine, and claim that it is therefore atheists and skeptics who have blind faith.

Skeptics have blind faith? you ask. It is good to be skeptical and examine all of our beliefs and evidence, but to maintain a skeptical (agnostic, apistic) position is deciding not to decide what we believe. One can say “I am apistic” (or agnostic, or skeptical) if one is not claiming it as a position—if one is in the process of examining the evidence and has not rendered a verdict. But, if one is done examining, one only claims neutral ground in bad faith. Why?…

The evidence for God is in, or there isn’t going to be any. This is especially true if one’s God concept includes goodness and love, because either there has been a demonstration of that good love by now, or there isn’t going to be one. To stick with “I don’t know” is about as honest as choosing not to choose, which Sartre rightly termed “bad faith“. It is like voting using the “eenie meenie miney” method, or the “what s/he said” method, without ever doing any real research.

Most atheists and skeptics who deny they “believe” do so to distance themselves from “believers”—people who they feel are of necessarily blind faith. However, all beliefs lacking absolute certainty involve some degree of faith, not all faith is blind, and blind faith is nowhere found in the Bible. Good faith (epistemologically speaking) is a lack of doubt due to such doubts being answered by strong evidence.

My challenge to atheists, theists and apistics alike is to deal honestly with faith and examine the basis for their belief—what evidence answers their doubts? See this article for evidence of a God who has demonstrated his good, loving essence.

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Notes: Numbers 31-32

Numbers 31-32

Bible Narrative Project

chapter 31–So, after a brief intermission to take a census and make sure Joshua’s good to go, we pick up where we left off at the end of chapter 25–tying up loose ends with Midian. These slaughters (many more to come) always bother me. They didn’t have high-tech weapons that could reduce the number of casualties by pin-pointing only the guilty (which by this time included all but they very young), and they didn’t have restoration efforts that could help innocents (the very young) restore things back to normal. In order to survive, they had to worry about things like inheritance rights. However, they spared the women and children as plunder, when they were told they could only spare female virgins (because they would eventually help increase their population and did not pose a threat to inheritance rights). The killing of the male children is said to be euthenasia, because Israel was not strong enough yet to support them–rather than doom them to slow death, they killed them quickly. If you do not fully grasp the offense of Midian and why this holy war occurred, see the explanation that the leadership of Midian attempted to use sex as a weapon against Israel: http://www.christianthinktank.com/midian.html There is a parallel between the sex in this situation, poised to enter the Promised Land, and the sex at Sinai, waiting for Moses to come back down. What is weird to me is that Moses’ wife is from Midian…he stayed there a while before going back and leading the Israelites out of Egypt. Wasn’t that weird for them? No mention of it. Maybe it didn’t need saying?

chapter 32–the tribes of Gad, Reuben and (1/2 tribe) Manasseh want to settle in the land the Israelites have conquered (Gilead: kingdoms of Sihon of the Amorites and Og of Bashan), but agree to cross the Jordan first and help the rest of the tribes in battle. Things are revving up.

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