• Should hinge propositions be taken as given/factual for a language game to make sense ?

    I am unsure how the element of 'truth value' fits into this work. I have no idea what an "antirealist" reading of Wittgenstein might look like.

    But the work shows Wittgenstein questioning Moore's confidence in the use of certain propositions. That is not presented as an argument against him or what should be accepted as a set of facts. From that point of view, Moore wants to have done with a set of issues that Wittgenstein is not ready to close the door upon.
  • Should hinge propositions be taken as given/factual for a language game to make sense ?

    I am confused here. I thought some of what Wittgenstein was resisting was the utility Moore put in placing some propositions outside of what could be doubted. Moore's intent seems to be denying 'antirealism.' Section 94 seems to be saying: not so fast, if the measuring stick I have been given can only be used under certain conditions, its use tells me jack about those conditions in the way Moore says they do.
  • Jesus Freaks
    Thomas is simply a list of sayings, not a narrative and is unfortunately lumped in with "Gnostic," which is misleading, although it also seems like Gnosticish sayings may have been added to the version of Thomas we have at a later date as well. What is of note is that some sayings are also more similar to John's more philosophical and mystical sayings. This makes sense either way, because the Gospels were clearly written for varying audiences originally.Count Timothy von Icarus

    One big difference between the gospel of Thomas and the other versions is that in Thomas, the kingdom of heaven is said to have come into existence and that most of us are too distracted to notice the change. That message is starkly at odds with those waiting for the end of "this cosmos."

    One of those options became doctrine while the other option was thoroughly erased from memory (except for the bits left in buried pottery).

    So, is the will to erase exhibited here related to the views of the winners of these barely seen conflicts or the result of politics, where some win and some lose and so it goes?
  • (why we shouldn't have) Android Spouses

    Especially when you have to ship device overseas for repairs.
  • Jesus Freaks
    'm curious why even the most "philosophical" of Christian theologians (e.g. Teilhard de Chardin, Barth) include Jesus in their theology.Ciceronianus

    I am curious how Barth figures into your argument. He argued for a Pauline vision of the struggle between the spirit and the flesh that put the idea of an imminent God of nature outside of the crisis of faith. Grouping this hard-core Protestant with Chardin hurts my brain.
  • (why we shouldn't have) Android Spouses
    My wife would kill me if I got an android spouse. She would merely turn me out on to the street if I committed adultery.
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?

    In the first section of the Leviathan, Hobbes delivers a hearty rant against Greek philosophers and all who followed in their footsteps. The short version: They are a bunch of wankers, free to wander about gardens without trousers while discussing problems that don't really exist.
  • The Republic bk.8 Deviant Regimes
    The question of whether Thrasymachus will benefit or harm his students, is an echo of the accusation against Socrates' corrupting the youth of Athens.Fooloso4

    I see that.
    I also see how wrestling with Socrates makes Thrasymachus a better sophist.
    Opposing people may empower them. But what is the alternative? Silence?
  • The Republic bk.8 Deviant Regimes

    As a blueprint of an ideal city, it has some odd features. The problem of inheritance, as the cause of bad outcomes, is not made less sharp by how difficult it would be to remedy it. Socrates is pulling upon beards.
    The entire dialogue centers upon trying to disprove Thrasymachus's assertion that justice is only the preferences of the powerful. It turned out that we had to explore many sides of human motivation to approach the question.
    The city of words allows the other regimes to be distinguished from each other.
    Socrates was killed for bringing some of the city of words into the city of Athens.

    It is sort of a mirror image of Dante's Hell: "Why do I know so many of these losers"?
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”

    Your dissatisfaction with these chaps may or may not match up with that expressed by Arendt.

    She finds Paine to be insufficient while Rousseau is dismissed as just being nuts. Perhaps that has something do with Paine being pragmatic. At the end of Common Sense, he says that groups of individuals have three ways of influencing outcomes: They can develop forms of representation, join a military, or participate in a mob. The singularity of being a king compared to the singularity of being an individual does not fill in the big blank in between. In any case, Arendt's general dissatisfaction with the chaps, as a group, goes back to this observation in the essay:

    Since all acting contains an element of virtuosity, and because virtuosity is the excellence we ascribe to the performing arts, politics has often been defined as an art. This, of course, is not a definition but a metaphor, and the metaphor becomes completely false if one falls into the common error of regarding the state or government as a work of art, as a kind of collective masterpiece.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    The difference is between a picture of society as you against everyone else, or a picture of society as collective growth.Banno

    Hobbes would say that your first option is not a society but a war. The agreement to not have a war is to accept a binding force. The argument of Thomas Paine was that such a binding could happen without cancelling the natural ambition of individuals to gain their own advantage. In that sense, the instruments of cooperation are forms of rearranging the components that lead Hobbes to justify monarchy as the best polity. The war could be avoided by other means than establishing an absolute source of authority.
  • When the CIA studied PoMo

    Well, the FBI spent considerable resources infiltrating/parsing MLK Jr's world. The intentions for doing that is clearer to me than a CIA agent pulling on a Gitane while arguing against Foucault.

    I agree with the points you make about education. But I agree to them as components of a life I want to live, not as a defense protocol in the face of a new emergency. I am still working through all of the emergencies already at hand. It is hard to keep up.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”

    I count Nussbaum's capability approach as one of the efforts toward a 'guaranteed public realm"
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    I haven't the will to engage in this pointless exercise. Plato definitely points to this issue in his attacks on the sophists.Metaphysician Undercover

    Got it. You cannot recall any specific instances in the text that supports your claim of Plato's intention.

    Seeing as how my challenge is pointless, I will not darken your door again. May the road rise up gently to meet you.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    It is expressed in the passage with the distinction between "common good" and "private good", such that the "private good" is always sinful. This means that there is an inherent incompatibility between the common good and the private good. But this is faulty by Aristotelian principles, and those expressed by Aquinas, which were later accepted by Catholic moralists.Metaphysician Undercover

    What Augustine is referring to is not the 'private good' as expressed by Aristotle. Augustine is separating the 'what is good for oneself' as oneself from the matters of self-interest involved with participation in human affairs. In regard to the happiness of an individual, Augustine says:

    [God] himself is the source of our bliss and he himself is the goal of all our striving. By our election of him as our goal … we direct our course towards him with love, so that in reaching him we may fnd our rest and attain our happiness because we have achieved our fulfillment in him. For our Good, that Final Good about which the philosophers dispute, is nothing else but to cleave to him whose spiritual embrace, if one may so express, it fills the intellectual soul and makes it fertile with true virtues — City of God, 10.3, translated by Betterson

    It is argued in many places by Plato, that we knowingly do what is wrong.Metaphysician Undercover

    Point out a few of those places, please. Your observation does not square with the often-repeated perception of ignorance as a condition of the soul. The following was said amongst friends rather than argued against Sophists:

    “Anyway, think about it this way,” I said: “aren’t hunger and thirst and [585B] things like that certain kinds of emptiness in the condition that involves the body?” “What else?” “And isn’t ignorance or lack of understanding an emptiness in the condition that involves the soul?” — Plato. Republic, 585b, translated by Joe Sachs
  • Basic Questions for any Kantians
    I am trying to understand an essential difference between Kant's version of idealism and versions of idealism which came before him. Berkeley would be the most prominent example for my purposes.Tom Storm

    I am not sure how this observation fits in to the project of understanding Kant, but Berkeley can be read as the ultimate empiricist rather than as an idealist.
    If one's ideas about causality have no bearing on what is outside of experience, then they cannot confirm or deny anything beyond it. The skepticism of Hume becomes an implacable barrier. It is like Hume on crack, to borrow a phrase.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”

    One could take the same sequence to say that the result thrust 'Christianity' into incoherence. Pascal spoke of it as scandal to reason. The early Church Fathers told the Gnostics to stop making sense.

    The idea of the self as a battleground was the dissolution of a single world that explains our nature in the language of Greek thought. The duality makes sense in the terms of Manicheism where good and evil are essential components of creation. But that world is as far away from the Timaeus used to design Augustine's heaven as Paul of Tarsus is from Aristotle's Ethics.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    The problem with the passage you presented is that it defines "sin" in such a way that turning inward towards the maintenance of one's own well-being, is by definition sinful. This is the problem inherent within the distinction between apparent good, and real good, first proposed by Aristotle.Metaphysician Undercover

    Why do you speak of a 'passage presented by me' rather than address it as what St. Augustine says? To my knowledge, it is representative of what he says in other places. If you find this statement of his problematic, should that not be taken up as a challenge to his intent?

    I disagree that turning 'toward its private good' is equivalent to "turning inward towards the maintenance of one's own well-being." Augustine says, " It turns to its own private good when it desires to be its own master. The will wanting to be its own master is not a concept in Aristotle's practical art of distinguishing what is good from what only seems to be. Turning 'inward' for Augustine is accepting that one must choose one life or another. The experience of the conflict is given through Paul's terms in the Letter to the Romans:

    We know that the law is spiritual; but I am carnal, sold under sin. I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate. Now if I do what I do not want I agree that the law is good. So then it is no longer I that do it but sin which dwells within me. — Romans 7:13

    However, if we maintain Platonic principles, the good is what moves the will toward understanding and accepting intelligible principles.Metaphysician Undercover

    Please give an example of that language in Plato. In so far as doing bad things is the result of ignorance, isn't a 'faculty of choice' an idea that Socrates makes problematic? When will is spoken of as a cause, Socrates says things like:

    And is this not a general truth? If a man acts with some purpose, he does not will the act, but the purpose of the act. — Gorgias, 467d

    The distance between Plato and Paul on these matters causes me to think that the term "Christian Platonism" is an oxymoron.
  • What are you listening to right now?

    Yes.
    Thanks for the introduction.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”

    All points well taken.
    Regarding the Origins of Totalitarianism, Arendt looked deeply at how both torturer and the tortured became products of the destruction of man as Man. I think her later works always kept that danger in view.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    This, it seems to me, is by way of articulating the antisocial consequences of what has been revealed as the Christian notion of free will.Banno

    Strictly speaking, Arendt is giving a genealogy of the way political ideas about freedom became equated with free will. It is the equation she is militating against. The objective is not to give the last word on free will, Christian or otherwise. Her intention is to uncover a big mistake and move on with the problems of meaningful politics after correcting it.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    This is why "will" needs to be defined as distinct from those other basic capacities, like desire and reason, so Augustine proposed a tripartite mind, as memory, understanding (reason), and will.Metaphysician Undercover

    The quote I gave earlier does employ the language you object to:

    The will, however, commits sin when it turns away from immutable and common goods, toward its private good, either something external to itself or lower than itself. It turns to its own private good when it desires to be its own master; it turns to external goods when it busies itself with the private affairs of others or with whatever is none of its concern; it turns to goods lower than itself when it loves the pleasures of the body. Thus a man becomes proud, meddlesome, and lustful; he is caught up in another life which, when compared to the higher one, is death. — St. Augustine, book 2, 19, translated by Benjamin and Hackstaff

    Your inclination to not have the same faculty at odds with itself certainly echoes a sensibility evident in the Greek philosophical tradition. The matter of sin being a choice between two possible lives is the source of the duality involved here. Otherwise, there is no choice.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”

    Arendt is saying that if the principle of individual sovereignty was sufficient for the life of freedom, it would not lead to the absurdities noted in Rousseau's version of it.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    I provided an example of the phenomenon you mentioned, not addressing the process that is involved in such a phenomenon failing against forces that would oppose it. Nor is it a topic of what is being discussed here, although interesting.Garrett Travers

    That comment evades the problem of the sufficiency of declaring individual freedom that I referred to.
    That topic is integral to Arend's argument:

    In reality Rousseau's theory stands refuted for the simple reason that "it is absurd for the will to bind itself for the future"; a community actually founded on this sovereign will would be built not on sand but on quicksand. All political business is, and always has been, transacted within an elaborate framework of ties and bonds for the future such as laws and constitutions, treaties and alliances all of which derive in the last instance from the faculty to promise and to keep promises in the face of the essential uncertainties of the future. A state, moreover, in which there is no communication between the citizens and where each man thinks only his own thoughts is by definition a tyranny. That the faculty of will and will-power in and by itself, unconnected with any other faculties, is an essentially nonpolitical and even anti-political capacity is perhaps nowhere else so manifest as in the absurdities to which Rousseau was driven and in the curious cheerfulness with which he accepted them.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”

    How does that observation relate to the matter of insufficiency that was the central point of my comment?
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    She asks how a free community is thinkable, in which you are free with others. We think of a free community in terms of isolated individuals free from interference by others.Tobias

    In that sense, she is not opposing the idea of isolated individuals over against an idea of society or community but saying that the former is not sufficient by itself. The quote from Thomas Paine she gives is: ""to be free it is sufficient [for man] that he wills it," That may describe a necessary recognition of equality for the purpose of disavowing the claims of tyranny. It does not, however, address how to develop the means to go forward as a way of life.

    The nature of this insufficiency can be approached from many different points of view. Kierkegaard said that freedom was the ability to do things. Living as an individual requires more than setting up a boundary.
    The matter of capabilities and resources appears immediately when enough people associate with each other to share or not share them. Declaring all to be equal may be one way to begin but hardly is adequate for the struggles such a life must engage with.

    And when the forces of tyranny do gather their capacity to cancel freedom, the strength to resist comes from those capabilities being alive and well. That work doesn't happen by simply establishing a set of rules.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    The SEP says Augustine's will is basically self control. He was reacting against Manichean fatalism.frank

    The opposition to the Manichean view was to establish the culpability of the individual for evil in the world:

    The will, however, commits sin when it turns away from immutable and common goods, toward its private good, either something external to itself or lower than itself. It turns to its own private good when it desires to be its own master; it turns to external goods when it busies itself with the private affairs of others or with whatever is none of its concern; it turns to goods lower than itself when it loves the pleasures of the body. Thus a man becomes proud, meddlesome, and lustful; he is caught up in another life which, when compared to the higher one, is death. — St. Augustine, book 2, 19, translated by Benjamin and Hackstaff

    The idea of self-control as not being ruled by external or internal compulsion is more of a Stoic idea.
    That difference is the point of Arendt saying:

    Yet the Augustinian solitude of "hot contention" within the soul itself was utterly unknown, for the fight in which he had become engaged was not between reason and passion, between understanding and Thumos, that is, between two different human faculties, but it was a conflict within the will itself. And this duality within the self-same faculty had been known as the characteristic of thought, as the dialogue which I hold with myself. In other words, the two-in-one of solitude which sets the thought process into motion has the exactly opposite effect on the will: it paralyzes and locks it within itself; willing in solitude is always velle and nolle, to will and not to will at the same time.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    "The rise of totalitarianism, its claim to having subordinated all spheres of life to the demands of politics and its consistent nonrecognition of civil rights, above all the rights of privacy and the right to freedom from politics, makes us doubt not only the coincidence of politics and freedom but their very compatibility."ToothyMaw

    That points to the need for a 'guaranteed public domain' for all experiences of freedom, both public and private that requires more than legal rights but also is not possible without them.

    When looking at the Shoah, the loss of this domain was not simply a loss of political power, it was the subtraction from a domain for one group for the purpose of increasing the sense of freedom for another.
    One might get suspicious of the language of the will when one is on the receiving end of enthusiasts who talk about matters that way amongst themselves while loading you on to trains.
  • The problem with "Materialism"

    I don't have a dog in any of those fights.

    But I can call out what is claimed to be allegorical or not, within a certain body of text, without claiming what I believe or not.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    Yes, as I said, it depends on how you define 'will'. So, since the idea has no clearly definitive, unambiguous application I agree it is fraught.Janus

    Which was, among other objectives, the point of Arendt's essay.
  • Thumbs Up!
    Depends upon what conditions they are exposed to.
    And they are not all one species.
  • Thumbs Up!

    Doesn't look good on the resume.
    Having a green one might.
    Along with the part where you prove that you don't just twiddle your thumbs...
  • The problem with "Materialism"

    Augustine also justified the eternal suffering of those who gave up on their second chance of redemption. He was not speaking allegorically.
    Paul was saying 'this world' was coming to an end and another would follow. It wasn't a footnote to a comment on a Greek text. It was front and center to what one was being asked to be a part of as a believer.
  • Thumbs Up!

    I suppose having a green thumb from the experience is unlikely in either event.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    This doesn't address anything, it merely takes the concept of freedom and describes it as slavery.Garrett Travers

    The passage addresses freedom of the individual, as it has been expressed by Epictetus, for example, as an experience that is possible despite whatever condition or station of life one might find oneself in the world. Her intent to separate that meaning from the realm of political action is not dissimilar from your purpose in saying:

    " As far as "free will," there is no such thing. There is simply limited agency or will. My body tells me I am hungry, I can choose between foods. I have homework to do tonight, I can choose which class to tackle first."

    Arendt does not have to agree or disagree with your formulation to make the distinction in how the idea is expressed for different purposes.

    It doesn't matter if it is political by definition, what matters is the philosophy guiding the body-politicGarrett Travers

    To speak of a just "body-politic" is to propose a "guaranteed public realm." Doubting that such a realm was given to us as a state of nature in the spirit of Rousseau is not the equivalent to saying that "humans as not having individual boundaries between one another." You are the one conflating the two ideas, Arendt distinguishes them from each other;

    Maybe I'll read it to find out.Garrett Travers

    So, you just spent hundreds of words critiquing something you have not read. In the future, please indicate that is your condition before making a comment upon something.
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    As far as acting against your own will, that's begging the question. Your will is your will, for processes still a mystery to us.Garrett Travers

    On that point, Arendt agrees with you

    This freedom which we take for granted in all political theory and which even those who praise tyranny must still take into account is the very opposite of "inner freedom," the inward space into which men may escape from external coercion and feel free.

    Every attempt to derive the concept of freedom from experiences in the political realm sounds strange and startling because all our theories in these matters are dominated by the notion that freedom is an attribute of will and thought much rather than of action.
    -Hannah Arendt

    When properly exercised, the only logical conclusion that can be draw is that freedom between people, the recognition of sovereign boundaries between individuals, is the only manner in which to induce a society whose ruling polity doesn't violate individual, or interpersonal ethics (rights)Garrett Travers
    [/quote]

    Arendt describes that quality this way while discussing ancient polities:

    As regards the relation of freedom to politics, there is the additional reason that only ancient political communities were founded for the express purpose of serving the free those who were neither slaves, subject to coercion by others, nor laborers, driven and urged on by the necessities of life. If, then, we understand the political in the sense of the polis, its end or reason d'etre would be to establish and keep in existence a space where freedom as virtuosity can appear. This is the realm where freedom is a worldly reality, tangible in words which can be heard, in deeds which can be seen, and in events which are talked about, remembered, and turned into stories before they are finally incorporated
    into the great storybook of human history. Whatever occurs in this space of appearances is political by definition, even when it is not a direct product of action. What remains outside it, such as
    the great feats of barbarian empires, may be impressive and noteworthy, but it is not political, strictly speaking.

    And so, Mr. Travers, the need for a "guaranteed public realm" is because the appearance and maintenance of "boundaries between individuals" requires more than willing it to be so:

    Because of the philosophic shift from action to will-power, from freedom as a state of being
    manifest in action to the liberum arbitrium, the ideal of freedom ceased to be virtuosity in the sense we mentioned before and became sovereignty, the ideal of a free will, independent from other and eventually prevailing against them. The philosophic ancestry of our current political notion of freedom is still quite manifest in eighteenth-century political writers, when, for instance, Thomas
    Paine insisted that "to be free it is sufficient [for man] that he wills
    it," a word which Lafayette applied to the nation-state: "Pour qu'une nation salt libre, il suffit qu'elle veuille Vetre"
  • "If men wish to be free, it is precisely sovereignty they must renounce.”
    In regard to libertarians who argue that they are kingdoms onto themselves, the essay points to what is missing from their view:

    Without a politically guaranteed public realm, freedom lacks the worldly space to make its appearance. To be sure it may still dwell in men's hearts as desire or will or hope or yearning; but the human heart, as we all know, is a very dark place, and whatever goes on in its obscurity can hardly be called a demonstrable fact. Freedom as a demonstrable fact and politics coincide and are related to each other like two sides of the same matter.

    If the 'freedom' of individuals cancels the possibility for a public realm, we are in the war Hobbes described as a state of nature. If such a cancellation is not the intention of the libertarians, what are the alternative means to preserve the public realm if it is not recognized as a necessity?
  • Thumbs Up!
    When he tried to keep me under his thumb, I gave him the finger.
  • Utilitarianism's Triumph

    You just made a distinction between people who are greedy or not by your lights.
    I am reading what you are writing. You say it is okay for some to want stuff. It is less okay for others.
    I am not having a problem with reading what you are saying. My reference to bad behavior was not a claim about what you meant to say. It was an observation upon the limits of what you said.
  • Utilitarianism's Triumph

    Recognizing there is a similarity is not the same as condoning bad behavior.
    I don't get what identity has do with it.