instantc wrote:
Goat wrote:
Just because an argument is contradictory, does not mean the conclusion is wrong.
You are way off here. In Aristotelian theory of gravity, it's the conclusion that contradicts itself. I'm sorry but that does mean that the conclusion is wrong.
Goat wrote:(and, you have yet to respond , except by pure dismissal, the article I post that showed that 'strongly suggest' is not the same as actual contradiction in the case of the Aristotle argument)
Notice that even that author accepted that a modified version of the thought experiment would indeed be logically decisive. Since I am not a particular fan of Galileo, that makes my point just as well. In any case, I'd rather trust the consensus of the relevant academic community, even if you could find a single author who disagrees.
David Hume has also argued that our observations of the laws of physics merely 'strongly suggest' that those laws will hold tomorrow, it's not the same as actually knowing that they do. So it seems that your experimental method cannot do any better than strong suggestions either.
Right. Are you back again offering Science is based on faith because the laws of physics merely 'strongly suggest' that those laws will hold tomorrow?
You lost that debate already.
This Aristotelian argument:
I have shown that both your premises can not be shown true. And that you conclusion does not follow.
Your argument that 'argument do not need evidence'
I have also shown that you provided evidence (information, facts, data) which renders you whole argument that you do not need evidence for an argument false.
And here you are. You ignore that. Even trying to obscure and still debate this.
Tell me, which bits of this post do you find not correct?
http://debatingchristianity.com/forum/v ... 386#608386
Obscurantism (physical and non physical evidence which is not a classification of evidence at all) is not the answer, instantc. Nor is arguments from authority, instantc. You have been shown that your arguments are incorrect. Why not admit it?