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Meaningness's profile
David Chapman
David Chapman
David Chapman
@Meaningness

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David Chapman

@Meaningness

Better ways of thinking, feeling, and acting—around problems of meaning and meaninglessness; self and society; ethics, purpose, and value.

meaningness.com/about-my-sites
Joined September 2010

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    1. David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 3 Feb 2019
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      David Chapman Retweeted Lulie

      Importantly true! Also importantly true: the world doesn’t make sense, and never can. This is a source of enjoyable wonderment and awe (as well as terrifying dangers).https://twitter.com/reasonisfun/status/1092150947416031233 …

      David Chapman added,

      Lulie @reasonisfun
      The world makes sense. This is why we can have nice things.
      3 replies 7 retweets 57 likes
    2. John Nerst‏ @everytstudies 4 Feb 2019
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      Replying to @Meaningness

      If the extent to which the world makes sense is somewhere between 0 and 100%, does falling short of 100% make it true that it doesn't make sense? I think only if said against a very particular background.

      1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
    3. David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 4 Feb 2019
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      Replying to @everytstudies

      This raises key issues in the ontology of truth! One way of relativizing an absolute statement, that is importantly true in some sense (like @reasonisfun’s) is to assert that its opposite is also true. That then prompts the question “how can that be?”

      1 reply 0 retweets 6 likes
    4. David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 4 Feb 2019
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      Replying to @Meaningness @everytstudies @reasonisfun

      One answer can be yours: it’s true to some extent between 0.0 and 1.0. Or, it’s absolutely true that some parameter of it likes between 0.0 and 1.0. That prompts the question “how do we get that number?” Which in this specific case seems meaningless and unanswerable.

      1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes
    5. David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 4 Feb 2019
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      Replying to @Meaningness @everytstudies @reasonisfun

      There’s other ways of resolving a paradox of a statement and its negation both being importantly true. There’s no general method. One needs to dig into the specifics. In this case, one should ask “what does ‘making sense’ mean? How, when, and why does the world ‘make sense’?”

      2 replies 0 retweets 4 likes
    6. John Nerst‏ @everytstudies 4 Feb 2019
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      Replying to @Meaningness @reasonisfun

      Yes, very much that. I just suspect you're being coy when making blanket statements like the OP that you know requires a bucketload of interpretation to evaluate and I sorta want to call you out on it 😋

      1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
    7. David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 4 Feb 2019
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      Replying to @everytstudies @reasonisfun

      Ah… what would be a better approach, do you think?

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
    8. John Nerst‏ @everytstudies 4 Feb 2019
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      Replying to @Meaningness @reasonisfun

      Depends on what you're trying to do exactly, doesn't it? I think most people confronted with the assertion that the world doesn't make sense would take the wrong message from it. I did when I first read your stuff.

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 4 Feb 2019
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      Replying to @everytstudies @reasonisfun

      Ah, that’s interesting. What’s the wrong message, and how can I communicate the right one more effectively, or prevent the misunderstanding?

      9:28 AM - 4 Feb 2019
      • 3 Likes
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      1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes
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        2. John Nerst‏ @everytstudies 4 Feb 2019
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          Replying to @Meaningness @reasonisfun

          In my mind the wrong message would be that there is no reality out there and it's all in our minds, or that all knowledge is completely subjective (everything equally valid) and other such boogeymen.

          1 reply 0 retweets 5 likes
        3. David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 4 Feb 2019
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          Replying to @everytstudies @reasonisfun

          Yes, this is an expositional problem. There’s 200 years of people (Romantics) saying rationalism is wrong for reasons X. I explicitly reject that analysis, and say rationalism is wrong for reasons Y, which are unfamiliar to rationalists (although not unique to me).

          1 reply 0 retweets 11 likes
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