He is incisively attacking any and all primitive characteristics of humanity that - in his perception - make it impossible for the species to transcend the animal kingdom. — Gus Lamarch
In my interpretation, Nietzsche is correct in stating that it is the instincts and, consequently, the prevailance of the emotions, that delay the process of Man's transcendence. — Gus Lamarch
There is also the question whether there can be a 'Y' that is both determined and the result of pure chance. I'm not sure. You ask about the die. The result of a die throw is pure chance. It's also determined by how the particular throw was made. Someone might argue that is an example of 'both determined and pure chance'. I don't think that works - but perhaps it does. Even if it does work, it doesn't help or hinder either side of the argument I think. — Cuthbert
Here's the thing: free will (which essentially makes one deserving of punishment) requires self-creation or at least absence of external creation. Whether determinism is true or not is beside the point.
And it isn't true, because it doesn't make sense. Determinism is the thesis that every event that occurs had to occur. That is, it is the thesis that every event occurs of necessity. However, necessity doesn't make sense as a concept. There is no such thing as necessity. Thus, nothing occurs of necessity.
The same applies to contingency (the opposite of necessity). Contingency, defined as it is in terms of necessity, also makes no sense.
What matters where free will is concerned is that one is the ultimate source of what one does. And that requires self-creation or absence of external creation. — Bartricks
↪Jack Cummins Beyond good and evil could be rephrased, salva veritate, as beyond hedonism — Agent Smith
Was Nietzsche intending a literal goal of the posthuman condition as enhancement of the human condition, or was he pointing for greater freedom of thought? This ambiguity seems to arise in thinking of his concept of the superman. As a poetic philosopher was he inventing the concept of superman as symbolic for the evolution of the consciousness of human beings?
3h — Jack Cummins
Literature is an evolving concept. It reflects the issues that arise and complicate our lives, and it has in this "relevance" and moves with the times. This is very different from philosophy which has its world grounded in basic questions, questions that do not change with politics, ethics and social norms. — Constance
↪Joshs Nice and very useful. Where's that Derrida extract from, Joshs? — Tom Storm
Derrida is a sceptic. So a lot of his arguments are about the impossibility of knowledge. — Jackson
And yet, if we take Rorty seriously about pragmatism, he makes the same claim. — Jackson
I think Heidegger's notion of the being of beings is meaningless. Some philosophers think Heidegger himself realized that the ambition of fundamental ontology cannot be realized. So he dropped the idea from Being and Time in his later writings. — Jackson
I don't remember Rorty saying that. And if you cannot cite something, there's nothing to talk about. — Jackson
He also misread Heidegger’s notion. of transcendence as the use
of skyhooks.
— Joshs
Not familiar. Where does that observation come from? — Jackson
He thought Derrida was just being a trickster,
— Joshs
Rorty: "Admirers of Derrida like myself" — Jackson
Care to speculate on why he misread or deliberately reconstructed Derrida in this way? — Tom Storm
Rorty simply gave up and started teaching Literature. He knew Derrida and Heidegger very well, and, I suppose was inspired by Heidegger's privileging of poetry and its special power to ironize the world and thereby make new meanings, determined the answers to such questions were "made not discovered". — Constance
how can we realize that it is established, since our mind is part of all the things that are subject to change? — Angelo Cannata
if everything changes continuously, then it is never possible to know what we are talking about, because one second later it has changed its meaning. — Angelo Cannata
↪Joshs Enactivism (which was the focus of my graduate work) is not an "antidote" to prospect theory but, IME, a complementary model. — 180 Proof
↪Agent Smith For a post-Freudian/Jungian (woo), Nobel Prize winning scientific treatment of functional interactions between the un/subconscious and "conscious" meta/cognition, I recommend Daniel Kahneman's excellent Thinking, Fast and Slow. — 180 Proof
Overall Dennett’s view seems more a matter of practicality than what laymen truly mean when they say someone who has done evil things deserves to be punished or express satisfaction when something bad happens to a wrongdoer. To quote someone else desert without retribution is just another name for attribution but we don't need the concept of free will for attribution. — Captain Homicide
↪Joshs What are you talking about? He is not a philosopher nor a psychologist. — I like sushi
Anyway, always a delight to listen to Penrose. He is someone who probably won’t be appreciated more widely until after he has gone. One of the few living legends of physics still with us - far outshone Hawkings imo! — I like sushi
are there any sound non consequentialist arguments for basic desert and punishment under Compatibilism or are the ideas simply too irreconcilable to be held simultaneously?
Are there any good sources on the matter that can help me understand the issue? — Captain Homicide
Can non-sentient things (non-animals) have perspective? If not, what is the "platform" of interactions? What is even an "event" in this non-sentient/perspective world? — schopenhauer1
It is not so much a matter of "beginning with the subject" in my view, but of forming a distinction between appearance and reality. For Kant, we can know only appearances, but he also was the first to show that we can know what are the necessary conditions for any knowledge of appearances. — Janus
Modern physics is not anthropocentric, other than in the definitional sense that any human inquiry is anthropocentric in that it is an inquiry by the anthropos, by us. The notion of the human is a "derived abstraction" as are all notions altogether, including those of Heidegger, Derrida, etc. — Janus
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis is no more respected as it once was. There's been a ton of writing and empirical work on this hypothesis. Most people no longer think strong versions of it are true (i.e. it seems like people's thoughts are not deeply constrained by their native language). But weaker versions of it are still, I think, being debated. — Haglund
In college I came up with a way of understanding f the world that I have been elaborating ever since. But it took my 5 years before I was able to write a single word to articulate it. What I had in those first 5 years was certainly conceptualized, but it was not verbalized. I would describe this form of knowing as like an impressionistic sketch.In my view, experiences are just experiences until they are conceptualized, put into words. Until then, they have no meaning. As I see it, art has no meaning, although many disagree with that — T Clark
Is that all that language does is ‘say’ what ‘is’? Doesn’t language PRODUCE what is rather than merely express an already extant ‘it’?
— Joshs
No. That's not how it normally works. Ideas form, language follows. It sets ideas free. — Haglund
I have a undergraduate degree in math and read about quantum physics and cosmology. Interesting, but does not itself tell me much about the world. — Jackson
My own understanding is that it addresses the question, What kind of thing is the world?
Does the universe have a beginning? Did it come from somewhere?
Metaphysics overlaps with epistemology--and aesthetics--so the clear delineation is not useful to make — Jackson
I was not aware metaphysics had to be about grounding science. Not a definition I would abide by. — Jackson
Many scholars say Aristotle did not name his text "Metaphysics." Or that it simply referred to what he wrote after the Physics.
In the Metaphysics Aristotle describes the project as "first philosophy." Or, analysis of basic concepts. — Jackson
Sorry, did not understand that. Why does metaphysics have to be about science? — Jackson
The aim of metaphysics is to go beyond physics, beyond science
— Angelo Cannata
That is just not true. — Jackson
But affectivity, ethics, this kind of thing is inherently what matters, even if I don't have a language to say what it is. even if I were, as Foucault put it, being ventriloquized by history, there is this foundation of actuality that has a palpable "presence", beyond what a language game can say. Witt said in Nature and Culture that "the good" was his idea of divinity. — Constance
So, I would say: if you suppose, for example, that the moon is a planet, just to see how this idea works in comparison to the results coming from observation through technical instruments, then “the moon is a planet” is a scientific hypothesis, which means, there is no intention to make it the ultimate, fundamental system of ideas about the moon.
If you say “the moon is a planet” with the intention to build an assertion that should resist to any criticism, any objection, any doubt, so that, if different conclusions come from observation, we should think that most probably observation is wrong, then you are trying to build metaphysics. — Angelo Cannata
Yes. They presume a definition of subjectivity as if it is self evident. Is a subject merely a biological entity? — Jackson