• The Analogy of the Painter’s Palette
    “The noumenal blue objects we sense and come to know…”, is a contradiction.

    The Kantian references falsify your thesis; it may have been more helpful overall, without it. But you did say helps secondly, so….
    Mww

    Yes, good catch.

    So I think the he analogy is a useful tool when describing sensation best. I lumped all of the senses in as yellow to make it most general about all sense perception. But the point is, the empirical world is the blue. We never directly
    contact the blue because our senses take the input from the world and process it to become whatever we experience. So less general analogy would be to say, the world is blue (or some unknown color); eyesight is yellow and when mixed with the world we experience the sight of things as green. And hearing is red; and when mixed with the world we experience sound of things as purple. Etc. The point being, our senses are active participants in building the experiences we naively call the color or sound or taste of the thing.

    Second best is to understand Kant’s insight regarding the noumenal/phenomenal distinction. You are right. The discussion is not about “sensing and coming to know things.” That was inaccurate. Kant’s point is not merely about sense perception, so I shouldn’t even use the word sense. And Kant’s point is specifically that we can never know the thing-in-itself.

    But the analogy holds if you just use the paint to understand that experience is green, that all we can “know” are phenomena.

    So blue represents the thing-in-itself that we never know (shouldn’t even call it “blue” but maybe Kant shouldn’t even call it “thing”); yellow represents the categories of mind that construct or allow for our experience which is all green phenomena.

    Does that make more sense?
  • The Analogy of the Painter’s Palette
    "The one becomes the two, the two becomes the three, the three becomes the fourth which is the one."

    Blue is the 1. We understand blue by comparing it to something else, in this case yellow, so this is the 2. They combine to make the 3, which is green.
    frank

    That sounds like Hegel again. So maybe I need to rethink my sense that the analogy can’t help an understanding of dialectic.

    Sounds like we need a fourth color to represent “not-green”. Maybe the palette itself needs to be brought into it…
  • The decline of creativity in philosophy
    recreating God's punishment: linguistic atomization and separationCount Timothy von Icarus

    Modern man is an inverse Oedipus. He is born free, master of his own fate, and then tears out his own spiritual eyes, fating himself to wander the wildernessCount Timothy von Icarus

    modern man is more like Balaam, stuck on his path, hoping blindly in the better judgement of his ass to avert technopocopypse.Count Timothy von Icarus

    You sound like me. If I knew what I was talking about and read about it. Love it (and wish it wasn’t all true - although I have to look up some of the references.)

    My only hope for “modern” man is knowing there are other people out there who get it. Cheers!
  • The Analogy of the Painter’s Palette
    Synergy is the idea of something extra appearing out of a combination, the result being greater than the sum of the parts.frank

    Can we use the analogy to help understand the concept of the whole being greater than the sum of parts?

    A man is a whole.
    His brain and his liver are parts. You can have a pile of all of the different parts of a man, but only when they are arranged in a certain way, and functioning, only then is there a man, and it can then be said that this man emerges as greater than the sum of his own parts.

    Green is the whole man.
    Blue represents some parts and yellow can be the formal arrangement that produces functioning…

    I think that can work. Green is not necessarily greater than blue and yellow (green sort of supplants and is just other than those other colors), unless you see green as blue and yellow plus their mixture.

    ——-

    Honestly, I never liked the notion “the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.” I think the truth that notion is capturing is that the whole is other than the sum of its parts. I see why the first thought is “greater” as for instance a functioning man is certainly better and greater and more than a rotting pile of body parts. But isn’t a liver a whole liver of sorts? There is nothing wrong with distinguishing parts from the whole and giving them equal weight, value, import, in an analytic sense. “Greater” has baggage that distracts from a good concept.

    I think the truth of it is that there is the whole, and there the parts of the whole, and you do not get a whole until you have all of the parts functioning as parts of the whole. But that is not a catchy notion like “the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.” And now is see that maybe it works to say “green is greater than merely blue and yellow.”

    ADDED:
    And so back to reproduction:
    Blue represents the sperm part.
    Yellow the egg.
    The living, newly formed conceptus is the green whole new animal life that is greater than the mere sperm and egg piled next each other as mere parts.
  • Must Do Better


    Much appreciated.

    Just trying to engage, see if I could learn anything useful.

    I’ve been forced out of the neighborhood at this point. Like an undocumented migrant philosopher. Don’t speak the language.

    You have the property developer, the architect, and the carpenters and builders. You even have the folks down at Home Depot. I never have any problems speaking with any of them. Analytic philosophers seem like code enforcement - all post hoc and redundant when they don’t point to some rule book violation that usually only actually matters to other code enforcement officers.

    We need code enforcement, but we need all the rest. And so do code enforcers.
  • The Analogy of the Painter’s Palette

    Man, woman and child.

    Let's see. Seems like the child has to be green, so we can make the man or woman, each either blue or yellow.

    I guess what is odd, is that a child is also male or female, so the child, who is green, is also just blue or yellow.

    Maybe just cellular reproduction. The cell is the blue, the two cells produced are each the green, and the moment of division is the insertion of yellow.

    Difficult... but maybe worth some further thought to see if it can be made useful.
  • Must Do Better
    it can really help to pare down a post to a couple of carefully expressed questions or observations.J

    Got it.

    I’m firing off a few, what I think are, sufficiently pared down ideas, hoping maybe one will stick.

    So, ignore what I just said. All I’m saying is, thanks for the above tip.
  • Must Do Better
    "When you say 'language about language'J

    I'm saying, we are both expressly saying "language about language" and both saying things about this like "essential tool" and "clearly scientific" which seem relatable to me, so we seem to me to be making similar observations in response to the article. Like we are in the same neighborhood (although I'm am starting to feel like I need to find a realtor.)

    You don't seem to even see what I am saying. I see us saying a lot of the same things.

    So your answer to whether I am understanding anything from the article or from what you said must be "no" (that is, if you, in fact, understand the article - we could both be misunderstanding each other and the article, and we might never know it from how this conversation is going).

    I think this exchange between us is a performative example of what the article is trying to say: little to no advancement (be it of philosophy, science, this discussion, etc.) is the result of a lack of attention to rigor and standards, and is the result of leaps, using vague terms like "neighborhood" instead of building clear questions that, thanks to rigor in the building of the question, have possible resolution that two might be able to work on together.

    I think I'm following the article just fine.
    Be rigorous if you want to create something where progress can be marked. I could say much more, but... me talking continues to be a non-starter, too broad, and unhelpful.

    I am a plain, natural language guy. I think, sometimes, not always, we can discern the rigor without strangling the discussion. I think we can tell who is rigorous and who is not without always repeating the ground rules. Sometimes we can't. You see what I am saying as too vague. So does Banno. I think we all see me trying to further clarify what I'm trying to say as not really helpful to the thread, and probably uninteresting to you all anyway at this point.
    _______

    This is the place where I sit when approaching philosophy. Struggling to move as high above the weeds as possible, often contradicting myself for sake of some even higher vantagepoint, something hypothetical, something yet to be disproved and begging some method to disprove it. I don't want to miss the forest for the sake of the tree stump; but that is precisely because everywhere I go are tree stumps so I know there is a forest that eludes:

    Those who applaud a methodological platitude usually assume that they comply with it. I intend no such comfortable reading. To one degree or another, we all fall short not just of the ideal but of the desirable and quite easily possible. Certainly this afterword exhibits hardly any of the virtues that it recommends, although with luck it may still help a bit to propagate those virtues (do as I say, not as I do). Philosophy has never been done for an extended period according to standards as high as those that are now already available, if only the profession will take them seriously to heart.

    So last attempt, hopefully, to point to something interesting I've gathered while reading the article (which is really a restatement of Banno's Two ways to Philosophize thread). Rigor is a tool, not an end. Maybe Siddhartha Buddha was not speaking with scientific rigor, but a deeply logical thinker, schooled in modal logic and analytics, can nevertheless glean useful data about the human mind from his words, learn of things worth further inquiry, and maybe even turn his words into something analytic for rigorous scrutiny.

    It is important (I think) to note in all of this, that developing the virtues of rigor cannot simply be for sake of having rigor. The development of rigorous, analytic methods, like modal logic, are truly an advancement in philosophic tool-making; but these tools are new, and there is much work to be done before these advancements might salvage the profession from the basement of the humanities department at some crusty old university.

    Dissolving has a finite half-life, and an end.

    But again, as I've probably completely confused the issue for so many, none of this is meant to side-track or refute or downplay the more express lessons in the article. Lessons that, in the minutia, are clearly over my head (or that I am incapable of restating in my own terms). I agree, rigor is essential to anything approaching science, and if philosophy wants to be able to make progress and measure progress, the science of language, logic and rule-making is an essential part of it, in all of the ways raised in the article.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    The US Supreme Court just issued a ruling dealing with free speech and laws that can limit it.

    It can be found here:

    https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25985319-free-speech-coalition-v-paxton/

    It gets interesting and more readable at page 6 of the opinion, which is page 10 of this online document.

    They describe the “level of scrutiny” which is either “strict” or “intermediate” or “rational basis” and why these levels were created. They talk about how “pornography” has been defined and regulated historically. This is where lovers of political freedom (ie most people) should start to pay attention. This is government defining what the content of speech is so they can regulate it. This is where tk court says things like “having no literary or artistic value” about pornography. Most happen to agree with a characterization like that (which is how the Court can make those determinations), and I agree as an adult what porn is and that it is just bad for children if not fairly base for all involved - but we must pause when we let some government official tell us what we are all allowed to actually do and say about anything.

    Just to be clear, I don’t see any slippery slope here, and am glad the government regulates pornography to protect the children in society (with what tiny protections they can provide in this area). Just because the government can define what counts as pornography versus what counts as art, doesn’t mean they are going to be able to define other content (like what is good art or what is harmful political opinion) nor develop a law that regulates such content. The court has always been careful here and the voices that oppose legislation have always been well represented.

    But the opinion is how the lawyers, judges, and law makers, and free speech coalition, all think about the topic.

    Notice the opinion doesn’t get into free agency versus determinism, or whether words can cause actions in others. Debates on those issues would be debates on whether the notion of any government was coherent, which because the constitution exists, they already agree government makes sense , and that all people have liberty and right to their own agency over their speech and thought, but that laws (words) must cause others to act and react in specific ways, and even limit what people can say publicly.
  • Must Do Better
    Appreciate the attempt at penetrating my thick skull.

    is there something about the structure of language that may be influencing what (one of us) takes to be obvious, or capable of only one interpretation, or producing some necessary metaphysical inference?J

    See, I think I’m following you and can just say “I agree”. And be done.

    But I also think if I rephrased what you seem to me to be saying, and questioned “metaphysical” above about the inference, and if I expounded on “the structure of language” being referenced here regarding what is obvious to only one of us, or addressed “capable of only one interpretation” - if I spoke about what you are saying you would probably say I was still getting it all wrong. Because I would say the following were in the same neighborhood and you didn’t.

    the thing to focus on here is probably that "language about language" is an essential tool.J

    But language about language remains the clearest domain of the most scientific statements we can make.Fire Ologist

    “essential tool” similar to “clear…scientific”.

    Not the same, but neighbors, or showing family resemblance, if you will.

    Or here:

    the measure of progress in science has emerged from sciences like physics, and not from analysis of language. We learned from physics how to be rigorous and how to measure progress, and then applied this as a tool to philosophy,Fire Ologist

    since physics is science par excellenceJ

    These are more distant, and I had to pull more context from my use to show what appears to me to be both of us recognizing physics as a prototypical science - the gold standard.

    And this point you make:

    But it's always appropriate to call a time-out, so to speak, and say, "Now hold on. Notice how we're using the words here. Do we agree on terms, for starters?J

    Fully agree. I am blathering on with terms and context and asking “am I in the neighborhood”, just to, paraphrase your words, check whether Hold on, how am I using my words, where is any agreement?

    I’m hoping I’m close, explaining why and how I think that, and asking you to work with me to either dissect and clarify what I said, or agree and/or build on it.

    To me, that's just being a "disciplined" (to use Williamson's term) philosopher. I don't require such analysis to set the philosophical world aright, and as that hasn't happened yet, I doubt it will.J

    I agree.

    Someone says something.
    The next one says something about what has been said to, for starters, form some agreement about terms.
    The first one says yes or no to the second one’s reuse of terms. If saying ‘no,’ hopefully showing why not.
    The second one can then say ‘ah, I see’ and hopefully shows what they now see.
    The first one again says either yes or no (the no process starts the restatement process attempting to come to agreement for starters…)
    Once they agree, they can either end the short conversation or one of them builds on the agreement forged.

    To me too, that’s just being disciplined.

    Where you just said “I don’t require [we] set the philosophical world aright…”

    I also agree. I find it is a major achievement when agreement can be reached at all, ever, on just the word “neighborhood” for instance. (Insert jokes like “no wonder, given you have such a thick skull…”)

    One tiny step at a time is progress enough.

    But although I do not require we set philosophy aright either, I, personally wouldn’t say say I doubt it. Despite all odds against it, I nevertheless do believe it can happen, or I could not see the cost benefit of going through all of this painful rigor. I’d rather learn about rigor doing physics, or carpentry, or any other trade than philosophy, if setting the philosophical world aright was only doubtful.

    My biggest philosophical interest and justification for all of the painful rigor, is something eternal. That’s the hope. To know something about being a person worth knowing. Anything permanent. Anything I can teach to a God or a person born 100,000 years from now, or an alien 10 million years advance, or that would make Siddhartha Buddha smile. Something like “is there something about the structure of language that may be influencing what (one of us) takes to be obvious.” If I follow your meaning. Something like “agreement on anything between persons is a miracle.”
  • Must Do Better
    Thanks for something.

    You are basically painting with a roller rather than a brush.Banno

    Ok, fair. Hence my neighborhood analogy. I’m looking to see if I’m in the neighborhood as opposed to at a specific address, or sitting right across the table from you.

    You and J both seem to be saying I’m not even in the neighborhood.

    Is the picture I made with the roller at least grossly similar to something the artist with the brush is trying to paint?

    Don’t answer. I’ll see if I can tighten up what I’m saying and asking.
  • Must Do Better
    And yes, we can't address every problem, but must pick the most tractable and interesting.J

    Why does the question remain unanswered? Why is it ignored?Banno

    You don’t have to answer the question, but could explain why it will not be answered, why it should be ignored.

    No.Banno

    Ok, ok. Fine. I’ll “do better” without you, and leave you to it. Enjoy.

    It’s like a sub-forum inside TPF - they who shall not be questioned improperly or uninterestingly.
  • Must Do Better
    Genuine problems will be assigned, or promoted, to the disciplines that study themJ

    That sounds good in theory, but how does it play out to the person interested in making progress? For instance, doesn’t that mean telling a politician that “liberty and equality for all” may be an incoherent fantasy and should probably not be discussed? Can’t really discuss non-existent universals and Platonist ideals, and impossible frameworks called “free agency” as if they can be demonstrably measured for all to see.

    I’m just using politics as an example. I don’t care to discuss politics.

    I’m saying, if the article successfully convinces the reader about the rigor that should be applied to all things spoken, (the rigor I have been calling scientific), then you can set up a game called politics and stay rigorous during game play, but once you question the existence of or value of the game itself, you are being metaphysical, and run out of tools and rigor and measures. In other words, politics becomes the bullshit it may actually be. Same as metaphysics. And really this would seem to be true of Physics. Which is how “physics” was once Euclid and Ptolemy (which are now mostly bullshit.). We may one day think Einstein was a joke, like the earth being the center of the universe is a joke.

    We are stuck on a sliding scale of bullshit, except when we talk about language and logic and make these the subjects of our science - the ultimate game. Or in other words:
    “Once the plumbing of language is done, what is left might be physics or politics but not philosophy.”
    — Banno
  • Must Do Better
    Could you explain why you're casting this in terms of what is most or least "scientific"?J

    Dissecting, analytic, rigorous, scientific philosophy.

    Discursive, narrative, not as scientific (or at all scientific) philosophy.

    ADDED:

    rejecting the suggestion that the mere divorce of sciences from philosophy is sufficient to explain progressBanno

    Instead of a sharp line between science and philosophy, place the analytic Witt type activity as the most scientific of philosophic activities, and the others fall below it. Isn’t the way I’ talking here in the spirit of the article? (Despite it not being rigorous, like the author admits he isn’t being rigorous.)
  • Must Do Better
    And what does the honest philosopher (language plumber) think politics is? Total bullshit?
    — Fire Ologist

    The pairing of politics with physics suggests an answer. Neither is bullshit in the least, but (on this view) neither one is philosophy either.
    J

    Let me put the question more rigorously (I slipped into metaphorical speak feeling the use of “plumbing” gave me some leeway. I like the language plumbing metaphor by the way. Useful.).

    My Question: If analysis of what is and is not done with language, or analysis of what can and cannot be done with language, is the most scientific of philosophical activity (so much so that one would say “once the plumbing of language is done, what is left [is] not philosophy”), then can any other discipline that relies on language be considered truly “scientific”? (“Total bullshit” was my metaphorical and absolutist way of saying “not science” or “not philosophy”). Or asked another way, if philosophy of language is the most scientifically rigorous use of language, are not all other uses of language less scientific?

    By raising the pairing of physics and politics, it seems you are placing activities we do with language on a scale where maybe analytic philosophy (logic, Frege to Witt to etc.) is the most purely scientific pursuit, and then below that, something like physics admitting additional suppositions and assumptions to its game and way of thinking, history admitting more, politics admitting many more, metaphysics admitting more than that, maybe as much as poetry, myth and legend; and then fiction not even pretending to be science but is purely supposition. But language about language remains the clearest domain of the most scientific statements we can make. As in, “Once the plumbing of language is done, what is left might be physics or politics but not philosophy.”

    Is this all in the right neighborhood of what Banno is saying?

    The other notion that I might be missing here is that the measure of progress in science has emerged from sciences like physics, and not from analysis of language. We learned from physics how to be rigorous and how to measure progress, and then applied this as a tool to philosophy, and all that remained standing of “philosophy” as it was formerly called, after we applied this new tool, was analysis of language, the remaining philosophy qua philosophy.

    But if that is the case, doesn’t that position philosophy, even if it rigorously keeps its attention on language, as less valuable and less universally applicable type of knowledge? That could be ok and could be the case but doesn’t philosophy become the study of the best ways to talk about physics? So if you learn rigor by doing physics well, there is really never any need to narrow your mind to thinking about language and logic in themselves; philosophy merely shows why two physicists understand each other. If they already understand each other, who cares about the philosophy of it all?

    Maybe that is the neighborhood (domain) of philosophy? On my bullshit scale, physics is most scientific, and a sub-issue within physics that simply says when and why physics language is logical or, not nonsense, is philosophy which applies the rigor it gleaned from doing physics to the language physicists use when talking about doing physics. But philosophy qua philosophy, oversimplified, is the glossary, or plumbing, within the physics text book.

    Further, if a philosopher tried to tell Einstein “you don’t know what you are saying.” Maybe that is even true, but for a physicist like Einstein to pose something nonsensical to the philosopher might just be the philosopher not able to follow Einstein’s meaning, as opposed to Einstein not being rigorous in his language. New rigor will always emerge ahead of the philosopher’s ability to codify it, axiomize it, and analyze the language this new rigor produces.

    In which case I am back to thinking there can be a hidden philosophic rigor in any subject, such as metaphysics or politics. And the philosophy of language (analytic philosophy) is always secondary and post hoc, and things like physics, or metaphysics or even poetry, or politics are really only accidentally different, but each, like physics, could produce their own rigor.

    So in the end, maybe Wittgenstein has eliminated philosophy as some sort of universal science of all sciences. That may be true. And we have moved philosophy inside each separate subject of study. So that we have physics, and then philosophy of physics (language rigor surrounding physics speak); or we have politics and philosophy of politics (language rigor surrounding politics, or political science).

    But the difference between the subject of physics and the subject studied by a politician, from what I can say, is a metaphysical distinction. So I am back to wondering if there is a subject known as metaphysics that can be rigorously studied as well as the others. Or are we kidding ourselves that there is a real object called “the political”? Is that a figment like a platonic form, an ideal? Can one really be rigorous about politics? Or anything outside of language?



    None of what I am saying or asking is meant to refute the article. Merely to understand it. I see myself as using implications to discern things prior and post the idea of true philosophic rigor, or the idea of philosophy as a progressing science with a distinct subject matter. I am not trying to recover metaphysics. Consequences be damned. I want to understand as much as I can.
  • Must Do Better
    Once the plumbing of language is done, what is left might be physics or politics but not philosophy.Banno

    And what does the honest philosopher (language plumber) think politics is? Total bullshit? Totally kidding ourselves about “natural” rights and platforms and ideology and voting for worldview change? All of these value anssignments and statements have no solid source, similar to plumbing. There is no true plumbing outside of the plumbing of language. Correct?

    Amen, if that is how it has to be.
  • Opening Statement - The Problem
    That if more people actually comported themselves as philosophers, in a spirit of rational self-knowledge and temperance, then there would be correspondingly less strife. But then that can’t really be imposed, it is something that has to be taken up voluntarily. And besides, philosophy itself is generally regarded as a bookish and irrelevant subject by a lot of people.

    So - why blame philosophy? Don’t the problems you’re lamenting characterise unruly human nature?
    Wayfarer

    That is a much more succinct, and so better, way of saying the key takeaways I was trying say. :up:
  • Opening Statement - The Problem
    The only results I see from philosophy are a world in which we are: unable to have peace,Pieter R van Wyk

    Hi Pieter,

    Welcome.

    We all see what you are asking, but each word is important to the philosopher. You are making leaps without showing the logic and it may not be logical to make those leaps.

    Just above you seem to be saying that there is one result from philosophy, and this result is the world where we are “unable” to have peace…

    It almost sounds here like you are saying philosophers are sowing the discord in the world, or at least supporting the philosophies that lead to or allow for all the badness.

    I don’t think that is what you are meaning to say.

    So of we are to really dig into the weeds here, you need to speak more carefully.

    "...the only thing we require to be good philosophers is the faculty of wonder ..."Pieter R van Wyk

    There are two threads raging on the forum right now as we speak that utterly challenge that. “Good philosophy” requires much more rigor than what “the faculty of wonder” requires.

    But still, I personally do think good philosophy and wisdom can come from anyone, not just an academic (academia can be a hindrance to wisdom). So I truly welcome your sense of wonder and willingness to make assertions and test them out here in the forum. But, as you’ve already seen, welcome to all of the push-back!

    I think you are asking too much and should ask narrower questions, if you want to get closer to the answer you seek.

    There is the human condition and the world we share. I would say nothing in it has really changed for 5,000 years - we shoot ourselves and our neighbors in the foot constantly, and blame the other guy. That’s what we do to each other for various reasons and theories and causes and purposes, or maybe just is.

    Then there is philosophy - which includes making observations like the one I just did about the human condition, but also includes seeing if this observation is said well and reflects the reality behind what appears. (So many ways to say what philosophy is.). Further, and more modernly, philosophy has come to be logic, the analysis of language itself. It’s hardly about such grand questions you are asking at all. It’s about whether your question is coherent and can even be asked let alone answered. It’s about whether my observation about the human condition has any real sense and reference to it that others can discuss with me, or is it just my own narrative.

    Last there is what you are asking - when is philosophy going to say the magic words that show us how to improve our condition.

    But there is a huge disconnect as to whether such magic is possible. It is a philosophic question whether some universal Truth even exists, one that could magically answer your questions.

    But also, there is an even bigger disconnect between knowing the one magical truth and subsequently following it and living it. The world is full of war because people don’t always care about the truth and simply want to destroy others despite no logical reason to do so. People are sons of bitches.

    All that said, there are answers to your question in philosophy-adjacent areas.

    Why is the world so messed up?

    Buddha: because of our desire.
    Christ and The book of Genesis: because people are broken, our essential nature marred by a self-inflicted wound (original sin).
    Existentialism: because mind in the universe is absurd, seeking to know the world it willingly distinguishes itself from in order to reconnect itself to that world through knowledge (absurd endeavor called “truth”) (also, in my opinion, a lot like original sin but without the religious baggage).
    Politicians: because the other party are all deplorables. (Because some people are sons of bitches but not me.)

    The philosopher qua philosopher hates those answers. Too mythical and psychologistic and idealistic, too able to be dissected into nonsense upon rigorous scrutiny.

    But the philosopher has yet to provide an answer, and many philosophers do not think it possible.

    And again, even if we wrote the magic book with the most persuasive argument concluding absolutely that compassion and love and humility and respect and charity, all fostered by self-discipline and practice, will together build us a better world, most of us would say, I’m too tired, leave me alone.

    That, in my opinion, is the problem - it’s not a lack of philosophy, it’s a lack of effort.

    Basically, it’s your fault.
    And mine. (Mostly mine.)
  • Is there a “moral fact” about the function of cultural moral norms and our moral sense?
    Most claims to 'moral facts' rely on a shared acceptance of same. But that's not quite how facts work.AmadeusD

    I like that.

    I’d say, mystically, human beings are the moral fact in the universe. Conscience is a sui generis, aspect of human being that exists nowhere else in the universe. The only reason to care what I think is because you are human too and might be able to see something similar as what I see. So a moral fact, that would work like other facts work, would only be derived from contact with other human beings and their consciences.

    Eyes sense and organize light for the consciousness.
    Conscience detects other human beings (minds), and compares what such human beings actually do (actions) with what such creature’s minds appear to be doing (intent) and finds ought in between them.

    We can analogously say “that dog is being bad” but that is metaphor, because dogs don’t seem to have a conscience at all.

    So finding moral conscience awareness in evolution or survival, finding moral facts outside of human beings, overlooks the fact that only a human mind can sense or detect the difference between what is and what ought to be.

  • Must Do Better
    More that it can not be done well by a dilettante. But also, it is not served by elitismBanno

    I agree. Philosophy is a rigorous science. Has been since Aristotle at least.

    Because everyone at some point wonders “what is this life?” everyone thinks they are some bit of philosopher. Further, children can understand something of philosophic wisdom - “nothing to excess” or “live in the moment” or “do unto others” or “if there is one thing I know for certain, it is that I know nothing…”. For this reason, people who would never pretend to be a theoretical mathematician, or a quantum physicist, or any professor, will pretend to be Socrates over a bottle of wine and teach you what life is really about.

    But true philosophy, the rigorous science, becomes nothing more than an art and cannot be practical if it is not shared and taught. It is almost entirely words. Is it an art or is it science after all? It is the science of thinking, and must be demonstrable in application, and so needs to be taught, discussed, and those who are taught philosophy must at least learn how best to think.

    But the purely theoretical and the purely analytic are both easily rendered impractical. So the true philosophers need to take care that they do not isolate their expertise from all place in the world of common persons. If the elites who practice proper, scientific philosophic thought do not do as Buddha did, and return to the people, teaching their wisdom to everyone and anyone who listens, then all of the philosopher kings are merely art snobs. For who cares of the difference between idealism and realism in Their kingdoms are sandcastles that very few can even see.

    And philosophy will continue to die. At least art has redeeming beauty for the shallow dilettante to enjoy anyway. Every philosopher can’t be Nietzsche. If Wittegenstein isn’t patiently taught, how quickly do you think it would die to history.

    we should still give some room for unusually good work popping up in unexpected places.AmadeusD

    That is wisdom. Wisdom can accidentally come from watching a dog. The most elite philosophic scientist has every reason to listen to anyone who claims to offer philosophy. Just to practice the trade and maybe find inspiration.

    That is my experience, and from it, my amateur opinion.

    So I agree with the article and the quotes above. I just caution there is no wisdom in ignoring amateur philosophers. They should be welcomed as students of life’s mysteries and taught how to be rigorous.

    We all need midwives. And compassion.

    Especially on an Internet forum (as opposed to a post-graduate classroom, where expectations are more frequently set and met.)
  • Must Do Better
    Post deleted by me. Don’t know what happened there.
  • Must Do Better
    It is difficult to even recognize and discover a truth about the world; it is harder than that to say it truly.

    Working through the article. Here are some initial lines I personally would love to hear developed.

    “It is widely known in 2007 and was not widely known in 1957 that contingency is not equivalent to a posteriority, and that claims of contingent or temporary identity involve the rejection of standard
    logical laws.”

    That’s a tree question.

    “One clear lesson is that claims about truth need to be formulated with extreme precision, not out of knee-jerk pedantry but because in practice correct general claims about truth often turn out to differ so subtly from provably incorrect claims that arguing in impressionistic terms is a hopelessly unreliable”

    That’s important. A bigger tree.

    “Philosophers who refuse to bother about semantics, on the grounds that they want to study the non-linguistic world, not our talk about that world, resemble scientists who refuse to bother about the theory of their instruments, on the grounds that they want to study the world, not our observation of it.“

    Great line. Forrest issue.

    “But when philosophy is not disciplined by semantics, it must be disciplined by something else: syntax, logic, common sense, imaginary
    examples, the findings of other disciplines (mathematics, physics, biology, psychology, history, . . .) or the aesthetic evaluation of theories (elegance, simplicity, . . .). Indeed, philosophy subject to only one of those disciplines is liable to become severely distorted: several are needed simultaneously.”

    Also interesting forrest issue. Still reading…
  • An Analysis of "On Certainty"


    Language itself is not the game. Because “a language game involves more than just language.”

    Does this then make sense:

    In the case of building with blocks, we can construct a language game wherein two people work together and one yells “block” and as the other person hears the language and plays the game of building the other then brings the block because he heard “block” and knows the game. The language game of building here involves language and blocks (likely among other things and more language and more complex gaming). But it takes language and blocks before the language game can emerge.
    Fire Ologist

    3 distinctions to grapple with? 1. Language, 2. the world to which language is applied, in a 3. language game.

    Or
    The use of the words (or, the fact of, i guess) is clearly a language gameAmadeusD

    This sounds like using language itself is a game (maybe because it comes with syntax, or subject/predicate functioning)? Or is language still not itself a game, and we can talk about language without its gaming application?

    I think these are valid questions, no? I certainly don’t know how to address.
  • Must Do Better
    For Williamson, systematic philosophical theorising is not the problem, but the lack of seriousness and rigour in it's pursuit. Now I think this not so far from my distinction between dissection and discourse, and worth a proper lookBanno

    This has great moving parts: theorizing with rigour. Promising.

    way to assess levels of creativity in philosophy. The Williamson article might offer a way to move that discussion beyond mere anecdote.Banno

    ‘Mere anecdote or, rigorous metaphysics and “systematic philosophic theorizing”. Philosophic newness, captured in turn of phrase. Creativity is fraught with peril. Continues to intrigue.

    how we are to mark, as well as to make, progress in philosophyBanno

    Great question.

    rejecting the suggestion that the mere divorce of science from philosophy is sufficient to explain progressBanno

    I reject that. That’s a sideways move at best, not progress to me.

    we can intelligibly ask what bread is made of, but not, at least amongst the presocratics, what everything is made of. It is a step too far to ask what things in general are made ofBanno

    I think you can intelligibly ask is there an ingredient (so to speak) that all things are made of among other ingredients that only some things are made of, but I still agree “it is a step too far to ask what things in general are made of.”. No need to take a side track, so early.

    Understanding the nature of grain and water and heats, and how they interact, lead by degrees and indirectly to the questions of chemistry and physics that constitute our present start of play.Banno

    Staying inside the subject matter between the grain and water and heat, moving slowly, methodically towards eventually, bread, and then chemistry, and quantum physics.... always careful before moving on and retesting, before restating again…

    Speculative ambition is an important part of that process.Banno

    Agree. This, to me, is the world part of the equation. It is what the science says or is about. It is the world ingredient.

    theoretical system building, needs dissection, careful analysis of small, concrete questions. Williamson wants bothBanno

    Yes. Philosophy is a science at the very least; it may be more; it may be about blocks or dead poetry, but science is there in every mix of philosophy proper.

    discourse must be disciplined by standards akin to those in the sciencesBanno

    For sure. I think that is what Aristotle and Descartes and Hegel and Spinoza and Leibniz and Kant and Wittgenstein and Russell and others were trying to do. Skeptical rigor exists in Plato’s Parmenides, and really in the fact that he made the question and doubting conclusions so central to making dialectical progresses. But, I wander off again. Need more rigour..

    undeniable progress has been made in modal logic and in truth theory, and there has been at least movement in ontology, with the then-raging debate between realism and anti-realism and the semantics of natural languages.Banno

    From above:
    “systematic philosophic theorizing” and “discourse” and “ways to assess creativity in philosophy”

    But now with progress, as:

    “modal logic and in truth theory”
    “debate between realism and anti-realism”
    “semantics”

    Doubt I can keep up, but I’ll try.
  • An Analysis of "On Certainty"
    And so a language game involves more than just language.Banno

    I think I see. And thanks for the reply.

    Language itself is not the game. Interesting. Because “a language game involves more than just language.”

    Does this then make sense:

    In the case of building with blocks, we can construct a language game wherein two people work together and one yells “block” and as the other person hears the language and plays the game of building the other then brings the block because he heard “block” and knows the game. The 1. language game of building here involves 2. language and 3. blocks (likely among other things and more language and more complex gaming). But it takes 2 and 3 before 1 can emerge.

    And when you say “we are always already in a language” (which I think you said a few times), does that mean we are always sort of given into a language game, already playing by communicating through language, or does it mean something else, like in a language but not in a language game? I took it to mean we are already in a game when we are thinking/communicating in a language about the world.

    What do you mean by “already in a language” then?
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    The Analytic is analytic. He is a knife: he cuts. He is very good at dividing, separating. He is not good at ...really anything else.Leontiskos

    I’m am trying to salvage dialogue.

    I pointed out from the beginning, we need to identify something whole before we have something to divide, we need both the metaphysical and the analytic, so I agree that when only focused on dividing we ignore half of the activity, but there I go trying to talk about the substance again.

    The way I read many of these exchanges between those I will call the Wittgensteinians and the Atistotlians (although that is just to avoid naming people here, but you know who you are!), is the Aristotelians openly seek to understand the other position (or any position), so they can accurately analyze it; they ask specific questions about it, to both better understand it and to reveal the limits of their own understanding, and they provide restatements, to better ensure everyone is on the same page; they craft critiques, and offer positive alternate views. Whereas the Wittgensteinians may do these same things, but only when talking with each other - when someone disagrees with them who is perceived to be an Aristotelian, they act indignant and paranoid (emotional) and tired (as if dealing with their lessers), and argue about hidden meanings and bad-faith and psychopathy (authoritarian intent, myth-making, delusional), some of them making ad hominem comments, and position themselves as too smart to dignify such people.

    It’s tedious to deal with but occasionally substance forms, so I keep trying.

    But mostly, it seems clear to me that the Wittgenstinians who keep taking away their ball to go home and don’t want to play anymore, are doing so because they are constantly being beat, losing the arguments.

    There is no reason to think analytics are the true philosophers and metaphysicians are just “making stuff up.” We haven’t gotten very far off of this bold (metaphysical) claim, and the Aristotleans have made it clear that Analytics First, the “Make Anslytics Great Again” crowd, is lacking any useful, explanatory power of “better” “ways to philosophize”.

    It is all written in black and white here. There are so many unanswered arguments. So much left undeveloped. Seems clear to me, the Wittgensteinians are in no position to tell anyone “you are wrong” despite how often they say it.

    But that is no reason for giving up. People are indeed wrong. I’d love to reengage on the substance.

    We should be tolerant - truly more tolerant.

    Wittegensteinians - you picked the fight - you lost the opening rounds - any response before you go home to your private messaging?

    What could have been an interesting thread was killed by the resident sophistsJanus

    I thought it was interesting. It was Banno who specifically asked to kill it. So are you referring to Banno as a resident sophist?

    Question their biasesJanus

    That’s not what I ever see. I see people avoiding a direct question, or changing the subject with an accusation “you are biased”. One person needs to ask a question at a time. That’s a dialogue.

    You don’t always get to answer questions with a better question like “maybe you are actually an authoritarian because of your God delusion?” Or “I’ll answer your question as soon as you answer 10 of mine, even though I made the assertion you are questioning and you haven’t asserted anything yet.”

    Real bummer.
  • An Analysis of "On Certainty"
    Pointing already is a language game.

    It's only a block so far as it participated in the game of building.

    This is of course quite contrary to the view that there are already blocks outside of the language game.
    Banno

    This is not to say that there is nothing more than language. There certainly are blocks.Banno



    These two come off as contradictory:
    1. There are only blocks within the game of building.
    2. There is more than language; there certainly are blocks.

    Does it clarify to say instead “there certainly are things outside of language games, it’s just that they are not ‘blocks’ until we bring them into a game such as building.”
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    would only result in more arguments about what ‘dead’ means.Wayfarer

    No that’s wrong. :razz:

    It’s how ‘dead’ can coherently be used when referring to this thread.
  • Two ways to philosophise.


    :grin: Nicely done.

    Banno killed the thread.
    And like rigor mortis, I just wouldn’t stop.

    Up for an autopsy?
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    Analytics do hold to a standard of consistency.Leontiskos

    I agree. That is the important contribution of the analytic school to the philosophic enterprise. Rigor.

    Added: Precision. And so clarity.
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    Would this not mean that some people might practice compassion even whilst holding an ostensibly intolerant belief system? Ye shall know them by their works.Tom Storm

    We have to go out of our way to show compassion on a message board. I’ve said multiple times in here and otherwise that I respect Banno and this and other posts.

    I’ve made clear where I agree with ideas and specific language from Banno and J.

    I get along with J.

    Banno is intolerant of me.

    And Banno and J can take care of themselves.
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    And it is not “us” versus “them” personally. I am happy to live in the world with them and respect them as I respect myself and you both. “Them” refers to “their arguments”.Fire Ologist



    You are misreading the situation. Easy to do on an online forum.
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    dancing can become an excuse for avoiding argumentsLeontiskos

    Describes half of this thread.

    Cut out the fat and just give me an argument for what you believe to be true.Leontiskos

    Yes, please.

    What I find funny about "hermeneuticists" is that their practice shows them to be looking for a "view from nowhere," even as they speak against it. They attempt to float above the fray with endless qualifications and contextualizations, and to what end?Leontiskos

    To no end. I am beginning to think that as soon as they see an end in sight, they feel the need to back track, take a turn, or just stop moving. Ends, like foundations, are anathema to the purely analytic philosophic enterprise. And sets a standard that cannot be met, namely, deconstruction without construction.
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    it is not at all clear that one can opt in or out of the rational community.
    — Leontiskos

    I want to say that the question of this thread is bound up with the question of whether we all have common aims, or more precisely, common ends.
    — Leontiskos
    Leontiskos

    Good.

    Count Timothy von Icarus is not a police officer goingLeontiskos

    Yes. I was playing language police. This isn’t just about language.

    He is engaged in a Socratic move, "Although you don't know it, you just contradicted yourself. And if you think you don't care about contradicting yourself, then I will show you that you really do care about it."Leontiskos

    Yes. We all need to recognize “since no one ever” about the world, in order to adhere to the PNC.

    Added: So the language police may have over stepped frisking J for saying “no one ever”, or the Wittgensteinian law book may need to be revised.
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    I'm in favor of the nitpickersMoliere

    I am too. My point since the beginning here is that we assert in absolutes in order to move towards the world and truth, and we need to dissect every assertion with rigor to keep it honest (valid and sound).

    Personally, I want to be able to say “no one ever” about the world. I hate the police as much as the next guy. Most of the cops I meet are Wittegensteinians. I am more often the perpetrating violator.

    But I agree we need those cops, and add we need both metaphysics and analytics, in that order, for sake of logically coherent, sound assertions about the world.

    I wonder most about where Banno said in the OP “perhaps we need both.”

    I’d say we certainly do. No one ever says something meaningful about the world without both. (But I can hear the police sirens again…
  • Two ways to philosophise.


    Just a little language police stop and frisk.
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    Given my best take on reality,J

    :up:

    Makes sense again.

    Leaves open the possibility or at least hope of baggage free observation.
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    I don't know if I'd rule it out on principle -- since it is just from my context that I see these things.Moliere

    Ok, so does that mean you would never use the phrase “since no one is ever”?

    That would seem more consistent to me - to avoid saying things like that.
  • Two ways to philosophise.
    ..,since none of us is ever…J

    In order to say that, don’t you need to see all people at all times?

    Isn’t that so high above all space and time, like from nowhere? If you were always in a context with baggage, how can you get to a place where you can say “no one is ever”?
  • Two ways to philosophise.

    Maybe it is just the way it was said. Sounded absolute.
    since none of us is ever…J

    None. Not one.
    Is ever. Not ever.
    Absolutely no one can possibly be.
    Since none of us is ever.

    Sounds like if someone say “well one time I realized a moment void of all my baggage, discarded everything, even this language, and was encumbered by no context, and had a view of all things” if someone said that, we don’t have to care about anything else they say, because “since none of us is ever” baggageless and contextless.

    Maybe no one is.

    Just sounds so absolute. Which might contradict the thrust of the position.