Talk:Objectivist epistemology
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[edit] Administrative query
This page is frequently defaced by an anonymous individual (or, less likely, individuals) who gets here from various public-access IP numbers and erases key contributions to the article. Would it be possible to restrict editing of this page to registered users? This would require the unidentified vandal to do more work, and thus might have a discouraging effect.
[edit] Attributions
"Reason consists in forming concepts through the use of logic, what Objectivism defines as "the art of noncontradictory identification"."
In actual fact, that definition was originated by Aristotle.
[edit] Contradiction?
These two paragraphs seem to contradict each other:
It is also an error to identify a concept too fully with one of its referents, i.e., to fail to generalize properly. In the Objectivist view, one who is thus "concrete-bound" (i.e. whose thinking is fixed at the level of concrete entities) is unable to use concepts properly. To be concrete-bound is to fail to achieve a fully conceptual consciousness.
Many contemporary philosophers claim that, while the proposition "1 + 1 = 2" is "necessary" because true in all possible realities, the proposition "the atomic mass of hydrogen is 1" is "contingent" because it is not constant across possible worlds. Objectivism would reply that the second proposition is just as "necessary" as the first: if the atomic mass differed, the substance in question would not be hydrogen.
Specifically, Objectivism seems to be “concrete-bound” with regard to the atomic mass of hydrogen. I’m not criticizing Objectivism, but rather pointing out that the article in my opinion fails to address this contradiction (or apparent contradiction), leaving me wondering which part I have failed to understand. — Daniel Brockman 06:01, 28 January 2006 (UTC) (point addressed in subsequent edit by Adam Reed.)
It doesn't address it because your question isOriginal ResearchWikipedia:No_original_research of a sort I highly recommend finding a webforum full of Objectivists who will be all too happy to have fun with it (lemme know, as I was highly tempted to address it before I remembered that policy)Darkmusashi 03:36, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
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[edit] Criticism?
Given that this entry was probably written by objectivists themselves, wouldn't a criticism section be helpful? Acumensch 21:18, 19 June 2007 (UTC)
Probably would, but as an Objectivist who is constantly on the lookout I've never really come across any criticisms that directly address the episeomology of objectivism. Ethics, politics, metaphysics yes, but not much for epistemologyDarkmusashi 03:36, 3 November 2007 (UTC)