Nicholas Geti wrote:
> To say the notion of right to wrong is a continuum is a truism. I don't see 
> the point of debating that.
>   

Errhhh.... sorry people. You seem to imply the right/wrong issue is
inscribed in a bidimensional space. Where did you get that notion?
Let's say it's a tri-dimensional space, then truth is a point or a line?
If it is a line, in which direction and how long is it?
And I wouldn't want to start imagining it might be a 4-dimensional thing.
In my experience, real world, life, are multi- dimensional (and usually
more than 4 dimensions), and as we all know, there is no order once you
get more than two dimensions, so there is no way to say if something is
definitely better (or right/wrong if you prefer) than some other thing.

>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Ed Leafe" <[email protected]>
> To: "ProFox Email List" <[email protected]>
> Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2010 2:49 PM
> Subject: Re: [OT] The Fallacy of Gray
>
>
>   
>> On Feb 25, 2010, at 2:12 PM, Nicholas Geti wrote:
>>
>>     
>>> Doesn't look to me like you ever took a course in experimental design and
>>> measurement.
>>>       
>> Ah! I knew that my Six Sigma green belt would come in handy some day!
>>
>> Yes, you can say what the correct value of something is, based on 
>> statistical analysis, and you can also state the precision of that value. 
>> Refining your test can produce results with less statistical variance, 
>> which allows for a more precise knowledge of the true value.
>>
>> You can make similar inferences with life experiences that do not lend 
>> themselves to statistical analysis, and the more experience you have, the 
>> better your understanding of the truth.
>>
>> But let's get back to the original topic: the notion that since there 
>> isn't an absolute right or wrong, everything is equivalent, as they are 
>> all 'gray'. It's a continuum, and it is possible to be closer or further 
>> from the truth.
>>
>>
>> -- Ed Leafe
>>
>>     



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