But the falsehoods aren't always evident, and what could be perfectly reasonable for you and me might be unreasonable for someone else. Establishing the premises of reasoning and their (likeliness of) falsehoods isn't always possible, is it?
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Therefore: science It disposes of our premises of what we consider 'reasonable', and makes it about what is, instead of what we think it should be.
End of conversation
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Well, there is a difference between a valid argument and a sound argument. A valid argument may derive its conclusion validly from the premises, but a sound argument does all that and has true premises.
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