Skip to content
Carmelics
TopicsThinkersChangesContributorsLoading account…

    Carmelics

    A reasoning platform. Break down any belief into clear reasons, explore both sides, and weigh the evidence honestly.

    Navigate

    • Topics
    • Search
    • Recent Changes
    • Contribute
    • How It Works
    • Glossary
    • Thinkers
    • Contributors
    • About
    • Statistics
    • Terms
    • Privacy

    Database

    Statements
    —
    Perspectives
    —
    Topics
    —

    Press ? for keyboard shortcuts

    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
    Statements
    321,452
    Perspectives
    108,905
    Topics
    42
    Home/Original/inverse
    See Original
    Inverse View

    It is not the case that The claim conflates disagreement about which definitions to adopt with disagreement about what follows once definitions are fixed—these are distinct epistemic problems.

    ?Set your confidence on the premises below to see your aggregate.

    Reasons For

    1 perspective
    Reason for
    ?
    • 1.Definitions partially determine logical consequences; changing how we define terms necessarily changes what follows, so they cannot be entirely separate.
      ?

      Think about whether this reason is strong or weak

    • 2.In practice, many 'logical' disagreements are actually rooted in implicit definitional differences that remain unexamined when treated as distinct problems.
      ?

      Think about whether this reason is strong or weak

    • 3.The claim assumes definitions can be 'fixed' without remainder, but definitions are often contestable and parasitic on deeper conceptual disagreements.
      ?

      Think about whether this reason is strong or weak

    Reasons Against

    1 perspective
    Reason against
    ?
    • 1.Definitional disputes concern meaning assignment, while logical disputes concern entailment relations—these require different resolution methods.
      ?

      Think about whether this reason is strong or weak

    • 2.Two parties can agree on all definitions yet rationally disagree about what logically follows, showing these problems are epistemically separable.
      ?

      Think about whether this reason is strong or weak

    • 3.Conflating these problems causes productive debates to derail into semantic disputes unrelated to substantive disagreement.
      ?

      Think about whether this reason is strong or weak

    Next step

    Based on where you are in your exploration

    Strongest counterpoint
    Explore the most compelling reason on the other side.