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Inverse View
It is not the case that If the community of inquiry has no principled terminus, positing permanent cognitive limits presupposes an unverifiable metaphysical claim.
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Reasons For
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Reason for
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1.
Biological and physical constraints on cognition (brain capacity, lifespan) are observable facts, not unverifiable metaphysical claims.
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2.
Distinguishing between 'limitless inquiry' and 'limitless human cognition' undermines the argument: communities may endure while individuals cannot.
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3.
The claim itself presupposes cognitive limits (e.g., inability to verify all metaphysical claims), so rejecting permanent limits proves self-defeating.
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Reasons Against
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Reason against
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1.
Any claim about permanent cognitive limits requires knowledge of inquiry's ultimate boundaries, which inquiry itself cannot conclusively establish.
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2.
If inquiry can always generate new questions about proposed limits, those limits lack the finality needed to ground metaphysical necessity claims.
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3.
Positing fixed cognitive constraints commits one to truths beyond experiential verification, which mirrors the unfalsifiability problem it identifies.
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