It requires wisdom to understand wisdom: the music is nothing if the audience is deaf. Walter Lippmann
I suspect that experience is often mistaken for wisdom. — Tom Storm
How Do We Measure 'Wisdom'?
We? Is this the objectification you are embarking on? The wisdom of the crowd?
The average of all gurus? — unenlightened
Unless your question was how to measure the wisdom of others... — skyblack
I think that your response is interesting because the question of feedback raises the question of how is wisdom constructed socially. I believe that is part of the issue, but so believe that wisdom is likely to go beyond social definitions. This may be part of the problem, being confronted with social and cultural definitions, while the experience may transcend these. It may be an issue of seeing beyond the ideas of convention, and trying to find a basis of knowledge, which is not simply about seeing experience in the ways we are accustomed to, and looking for deeper meaning. — Jack Cummins
only wish that it was as simple as that, because my own experience is of being told that I am wrong, independently of what I think. It often leads me to think that I am best to keep all my ideas to myself. However, while I am aware of the subjectivity of the quest, I do believe that so many other people are too. I think that the ideas of wisdom may be vague at times, so I am not sure of my thread question in some ways, but , at the same time, believe that many are in the pursuit of wisdom, so I am raising it, for anyone who believes that it is worth discussing. — Jack Cummins
I am asking this question because I am aware of so many conflicting philosophies and questions arising from them. I admit that I am feeling a bit irritated by so many debates in philosophy, arising from theories of so many different, but competing kinds. But, I do believe that some believe that they have the truth, and others are ignorant. I don't believe that it is that it is that simple at all, but please forgive my question if it appears to be completely ridiculous. However, I think that the whole basis of evaluation of knowledge and its application to life, is complex but far from straightforward. — Jack Cummins
What is the joyful experience that comes to your mind first when I asked just now?
Interestingly when I ask myself that question I am taken back to a time when my family consisted of my brother, my Mom and I. It was really hard on the house emotionally and it began to rain just as I was leaving to go to the next door neighbor which crushed me because I thought for sure Mom would say no.
When she saw my sadness at the rain she put her shoes on to walk me over and I said but you are going to get wet. She said no I won't, I am going to dance between the raindrops.
Lovely memory :flower:
Thank you for joining The Philosophy Forum and enjoy your stay~ — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I shalt now endeavour to critique your opinion.
Thesis: sometime the distinction that you so aptly described, between critiquing and criticizing, disappears, and for a good reason.
1. Not everyone responds to critiquing.
2. Some who don't respond well simply ignore the counter arguments to their thesis.
3. This is very frustrating to the critics, when the counter arguments are carefully thought out and are apparently valid.
4. The critics will become abusive; they don't utter ad hominems, they simply vent their frustration and call the original offender horrible names.
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For some reason the majority of the fallacies used in arguments come from the pens of those who defend their thesis. Most of insults come form the critics once they discover that their arguments won't stick, can't stick to the Original Poster. — god must be atheist
Welcome to the boards, SeaOfGems. Please be aware that we exercise here extreme criticalism. This is typical of philosophers these days. So please don't let it get to you if people make unkind comments to your post here.
I hope you will get used to the forum's spirit of fighting very soon, and have fun with philosophy here. — god must be atheist
A hallucination is that which has no stable reality outside of subjective manifestation. Consciousness, as the set of qualia we are attending to at any given moment, is completely private, and so has no reality outside of our subjective experience of it. It is hallucinatory. — hypericin
But your response is not driven by an emotional reaction? Not like an innocent bear. You're keep going on and on about how everyone has a corrupted mind... it stands to reason you're not excluded.
Then you also project an assumption (not conditioned by corrupting knowledge) about what it is like to be a bear.
No need to reply. But your poetry is kind of interesting, though dour, uncharitable, melancholy and nihilistic. The corruption has moved into my bowels. I must seek a toilet. — Nils Loc
But are you included or excluded as one who has a corrupted mind? I would be surprised if you alone could make that designation. — Nils Loc
Apparently not, since we now know that a bear isn't corrupted by conditioned knowledge. — Nils Loc
If a bear eating salmon in a river is an example of a kind of mind corruption (conditioned knowledge) all I can do is shrug my shoulders. I would much rather be like a bear salmon fishing, with no relationship to a past or future self that engages a ceaseless anxiety, supposing that is the case. There is just life in motion, pain and pleasure which comes and goes, no concept of death or something to die — Nils Loc
The OP could jettison "corrupt" and "innocent" for different qualifying terms, like virtuous versus virtueless, skillful versus unskillful, logical versus non-logical, et cetera. Not much to be gained by giant black and white categories reminiscent of the church or court of law. — Nils Loc
It may be interesting to discuss it if someone has another take on it. — original2
I suppose that goes both ways though. You can't really be the objective judge of your own mind. The esteem you grant yourself is otherworldly if so. — Nils Loc
Yes, you're much clearer but your value judgement using the strange words "corrupt" or "innocent" don't really mean anything because according to your language all minds are corrupt or innocent.
You haven't adequately fleshed out the difference between these two types of mind. — Nils Loc
Sorry, you strike me as overly critical and what you are attempting to describe is unclear and seemingly in part contradictory.
Implicit knowledge cannot help leave a mark on the mind as it develops. There are dysfunctional minds, unbalanced minds, depressed minds et cetera but a corrupt mind sounds like a self-interested immoral mind (like a sociopath) that exploits knowledge for power at the expense of the well being of others. Corruption is a judgement made from an a particular point of view, relative to a set of values. It would help to ground your generalities through real life particulars, or imagined characters.
Or maybe on par with your abstraction, a corrupt mind is related to the maladaptive constraint of ego boundary, as is with depressed minds, where one cannot move forward constructively due to the emotively charged content of the past. One cannot step out of the bounds of the known and is thus limited by a fear mediated projection of the world (seeing through shit tinted spectacles).
You can ignore me if you like, if it is good to avoid depressed (perhaps corrupt) minds. — Nils Loc
Agreed hoy is more of a sensation in that it has a certain immediacy that ca be directly attributed to a singular act - eating chocolate, meeting a friend, a sexual encounter, while joy — Benj96
But again it’s confusing because we use the term joy as a synonym for pleasure. When I saw my friend for the first time after several years I was filled with a sudden sense of joy. In this case it seems more immediate and reactionary. — Benj96
Innocent mind sounds like an oxymoron to me. The more mind forms the more moral responsibility applies to it. What's more innocent than a fire or a plague? — original2
Ah, but only a corrupt mind is stingy with their energy and time. — praxis
An innocent mind doesn’t fear unhealthy dialogue. — praxis
NO. It is a definitional assertion that Philosophy cannot function under bias. — Andrew4Handel
The living space of some depressed and anxious minds are less than modest.
Whether hung upside down naked on a steeple, or cleaving, white-knuckled, ropeless, to a shear cliff, or lost, neck high, down a well. It is no time or the right time to cur(s)e oneself. It would be so easy to leap if one weren't bound, less easy to grow too cold.
We might venture that no animal is as cur(s)ed quite like us. The censorious mind, deranged driver of ego and the executive mind, augur of all pasts and futures, arbiter of motion, has given us the task of digging a grave or a foundation for what is to come.
Go easy, censor. Live and let live. — Nils Loc
If philosophers were unable to critique discourse what would be the point of them?
The whole point is not to accept any claim but dissect it. (Which apparently doesn't happen here?)
Say for example someone says "Women are inferior to men". Anyone anywhere can disagree to this with or without evidence. But the point of philosophy is to analyse the nature of the claim being made. Not to virtue signal or win an argument.
I would not be interested in Philosophy if I took ANY claim for granted. — Andrew4Handel
I feel that philosophy has often been ruined by bias, personal prejudice, censorship among other things Philosophers are the people in the best position to criticise public discourses and not to become enmeshed in them. — Andrew4Handel
I believe that philosophy is originally defined as the love of knowledge. — Andrew4Handel
people running aroud making threads about each other — Baden
Calling people "racist" doesn't make things better for anyone. — T Clark
The contemptuous language in the post won't help solve any problems. — T Clark
It just makes the poster feel better but makes everything else worse. — T Clark
You have no right to inject your own racist inferences into other posters' posts. — Baden
You are retroactively presuming it does fit a particular race and then asking if that's racist. If there's a racist in that scenario, it's you. — Baden
You're again falsely accusing another poster of being racist with no evidence whatsoever when you've been informed on several occasions there is no evidence. Having no leg to stand on, you again present this in a misleading way and try a trial by poll. There's nothing civil or "low key" about that at all. — Baden
Enlighten me! I'm all ears. — TheMadFool
Why? — TheMadFool
What are the "dangers" involved and how do you propose we tackle/avoid them? — TheMadFool