We might ask: okay, but why ought we to act only on theories which have not been falsified? We could probably come up with a pretty reasonable answer to this question—but as you can see, the regress has begun.
No regress has begun. I already answered why:
The reason we behave as if it’s true is that it’s the best option available. All the other theories are criticized (= we have an explanation of what we think is a mistake/flaw in them). We wouldn’t want to act on an idea that we (thought we) saw a mistake in, over one we don’t think we see any mistake with—we should use what (fallible) knowledge we have.
Try to regress me.
It is possible, if you want, to create a regress of some kind which isn’t the same one and isn’t important. The crucial issue is: are the questions that continue the regress any good? Do they have some kind of valid point to them? If not, then I won’t regard it as a real regress problem of the same type. You’ll probably wonder how that’s evaluated, but, well, it’s not such a big deal. We’ll quickly get to the point where your attempts to create regress look silly to you. That’s different than the regresses inductivists face where it’s the person trying to defend induction who runs out of stuff to say.
No regress has begun. I already answered why:
Try to regress me.
It is possible, if you want, to create a regress of some kind which isn’t the same one and isn’t important. The crucial issue is: are the questions that continue the regress any good? Do they have some kind of valid point to them? If not, then I won’t regard it as a real regress problem of the same type. You’ll probably wonder how that’s evaluated, but, well, it’s not such a big deal. We’ll quickly get to the point where your attempts to create regress look silly to you. That’s different than the regresses inductivists face where it’s the person trying to defend induction who runs out of stuff to say.