I have just bought a book, called "the pig who wanted to be eaten, and 99 other thought experiments"
Now I understand it'd be big trouble if i were to copy out the experiments, as some of them are copyrighted and some belong to the author of the book, but I figure I can put them in my own words, because i believe it'd be good to discuss some/all of them here. Please let me know if i'm wrong in thinking such a thing.
Experiment 1:
this one comes from descartes and is very close to the "I think, therefore I am" quote.
It suggests that if there were a demon which played with our minds to make us believe that which is not true, in the same way a hypnotist can make a man forget that 6 comes between 5 and 7, how can we know anything to be true, since we can't trust our minds to be thinking straight how can we reason anything out at all?
The author (Julian Baggini) likens this to using a set of dodgy scales to weigh things to test if the scales are working. I prefer the analogy of opening a box with the key that's inside it.
This thought experiment points out something very important to anyone who plans to do any reasoning at all, so could be very useful to some of us.
Now I understand it'd be big trouble if i were to copy out the experiments, as some of them are copyrighted and some belong to the author of the book, but I figure I can put them in my own words, because i believe it'd be good to discuss some/all of them here. Please let me know if i'm wrong in thinking such a thing.
Experiment 1:
this one comes from descartes and is very close to the "I think, therefore I am" quote.
It suggests that if there were a demon which played with our minds to make us believe that which is not true, in the same way a hypnotist can make a man forget that 6 comes between 5 and 7, how can we know anything to be true, since we can't trust our minds to be thinking straight how can we reason anything out at all?
The author (Julian Baggini) likens this to using a set of dodgy scales to weigh things to test if the scales are working. I prefer the analogy of opening a box with the key that's inside it.
This thought experiment points out something very important to anyone who plans to do any reasoning at all, so could be very useful to some of us.