You can certainly ask that question and disagree about the answer. Other people will just go away & talk about something else. I'm like this with Aristotelian Thomism. I know enough of it to know I don't ever want to talk about it again.
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You don't find (friendly) criticisms of your approach at all interesting? In case it wasn't clear from my recent
@QuilletteM articles, I'm defending the same values you cherish, but I'm doing so by first rebutting the sound criticisms of their philosophical underpinnings. -
Not at all interesting, no. I don't doubt the friendliness. I'll leave you to rebut sound criticisms of philosophical underpinnings and we can perhaps defend the same values together in future without either of us being bored to tears by the other's thinking around them?
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Just to be clear: I'm not bored to tears, or bored at all, by you. As for defending the same values, there will no doubt be many occasions to do so, as there already have been. Ultimately (and perhaps ironically you agree), they're not really the same values.
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It does seem unlikely they would be.
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1/ Here's what I was thinking, lest it seem too vatic. I defend liberal values because they're required for the fullest pursuit of truth by reason; that's why I need to go to the bottom of the justification, even of liberal values and scientific epistemology themselves.
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I'm muting this conversation now. I really can't bear any more of it.
End of conversation
New conversation -
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