That might be true for you, but its not true for me
(Difference between revisions)
Daemonowner (Talk | contribs) m |
m (Spelling, capitalization.) |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| − | This argument was made famous by [[Bill O' | + | This argument was made famous by [[Bill O'Reilly]] on his show when interviewing [[Richard Dawkins]]. |
| − | It is flawed because truth is independant of what someone thinks, its reality. As queried by | + | It is flawed because truth is independant of what someone thinks, its reality. As queried by Dawkins -- "you mean true for you is different from true for anybody else?", something such as empirical truth cannot be true for someone and not true for someone else. |
Revision as of 21:59, 13 June 2010
This argument was made famous by Bill O'Reilly on his show when interviewing Richard Dawkins. It is flawed because truth is independant of what someone thinks, its reality. As queried by Dawkins -- "you mean true for you is different from true for anybody else?", something such as empirical truth cannot be true for someone and not true for someone else.