Does Blackstone's ratio apply to the issue? Better that a 100 guilty people go free than that 1 innocent person be unjustly punished. Better that we deal with a 100 bad ideas than that 1 good idea be suppressed. — Agent Smith
If we ignore the labels your proposal seems to be that more diversity is needed in philosophy. But this is quite different than saying more diversity is needed in analytic philosophy. — Fooloso4
I don't think it is anti-historicist but ahistorist, It is not analytical philosophy but its domination that is historical. The assumption that truth is timeless predates analytical philosophy. But analytic philosophy is not monolithic. — Fooloso4
Reason as it was understood by ancient philosophy is not the same as reason based on the modern mathematical model. Reason has not yielded the kind of agreement and certainty we find in mathematics. Yes, we should use reason, but not the timeless, abstracted, apodictic, mathematical model of reason — Fooloso4
We run into the problem of whether the work of this or that philosopher can still be considered analytical philosophy. While I think that such labels may have some use, it is limited and ultimately counterproductive. We might argue whether someone like Rorty was simply working within and expanding analytical philosophy. How useful is it to attempt to draw clear lines between analytical, pragmatist, and continental philosophy? — Fooloso4
It is not as if there was a marketplace of ideas in which all are welcome to display their wares and most buyers chose analytic philosophy because they had shopped and determined that it is the best alternative. Analytic philosophy came to dominate because it was, so to speak, the only thing that was safe for sale in the marketplace. — Fooloso4
The liberal attitude is part of the problem. It is based on the fiction of autonomous individuals. More and more academic freedom has become a fantasy. The ivory tower is a fantasy. As Schuringa argues, analytic philosophy is not "above history and politics". — Fooloso4
As long as the assumption that there is a free marketplace of ideas is not called into question a call for affirmative action will only yield strangely deformed products of rather than real alternatives to the marketplace. — Fooloso4
I think one question that must be asked is: where is the marketplace of ideas to be found? Will it remain primarily in academia or will media sources become increasingly influential? Will anti-liberal political and economic forced increasingly shape both academia and media?
Is there really something more to "analytic logic"?
(This is not a rhetoric question. It's an actual one! :smile:) — Alkis Piskas
I haven't read a lot of history about what longer-term effects the '49 Red Scare had on academia. At first there was a definite liberal chill, but then..., say by 1969 or 1979, what? — BC
The best model for the market place of ideas is unfettered free trade. No quotas, no diversity programs, no affirmative hiring. Mao Tse-Tung said, "Let a thousand flowers bloom, a hundred schools of thought contend". Seems like a good idea for Academia, but as in China, eventually the management will have had enough odd flowers and weird schools, and the brakes will be applied. — BC
One very good example of a fuzzy/vague concept is tallness/shortness. However, once we fix a particular height as a cut-off point, the vagueness/fuziness disappears.
Two things to consider:
1. Adapt logic to our conceptual schema: Vagueness is part of our language. Develop fuzzy logic.
2. Adapt our conceptual schema to binary logic: Use precising definitions. Keep binary logic. — TheMadFool
Is it possible for things to be both true and false at the same time or neither true or false at the same time? Or must things be either true or false at any given time? — TiredThinker
The words negotiate or coordinate make it seem like we decide, say, what an apology is, but that is of course already just a part of our lives, like choosing. We may have reasons for promising, but we individually don't conceive of what promising is (with reasons ). — Antony Nickles
According to this....err, rationality, because I’ve never committed an abominable moral act, which is a particular deficit in experience, I lack wisdom with respect to what my judgement should be, given the occasion for the possible commission of such an act. But if I follow a perfectly rational method for obtaining sufficient knowledge of myself, what my act on the occasion of possibly committing an abomination, should already have been determined, which immediately presupposes reason is the root of ethical wisdom. — Mww
We "give and take" reasons because Cavell pictures a moral moment, an event where we are lost or conflicted within our culture so our acts carry from our aligned lives into a sort of extension to an unknown with each other. — Antony Nickles
And so we define ourselves by what we are willing to accept the implications for, what acts we take as ours, at this time, here, in response to the other, society, etc. And thus knowledge is not our only relation to the world (it is also our act). We do not 'know ' another's pain, we acknowledge it, react to it (or not). — Antony Nickles
So these interests and my interest most times align, but when they conflict, they do so reasonably, for reasons and from the everyday logic of each thing we do, or at least possibly, as we may fail to come together. This is the hope, and fear and dissapponment with the moral realm at all. — Antony Nickles
Elsewhere he specifically addresses what he calls Moral Perfectionism, but it is each individual, in a sense, doing what they find their duty is to themselves, with the same sense of accepting responsibility. And the methods would be, as well, to learn the makeup of the activity (it's implications, criteria, judgments) that we are involved in. — Antony Nickles
The consistency is our culture, all our lives, and, when it comes down to it, in a moral moment, me, who I am to be. — Antony Nickles
Impressions: he seems reasonable, likable, decent. — Zugzwang
In any case I would even suggest that your questions about ethics - "what are we doing? What are we aiming at?" ought to be read back into ethics as the sine qua non of ethical practice itself: that the demands that ethics makes on us are demands to grope at finding whatever partial, workable, passable solutions to just those questions. And those are questions of life and practice that cannot be closed off by any theoretical investigation that would provide any kind of ethical guidebook from on high. — StreetlightX
But really, once you've read Cavell, most discussion of ethics - in a philosophical setting anyway - come off as unbearably stilted and artificial. It's great. — StreetlightX
Could indeed be a new way to be nice and upper middle class on the safe green front lawn, chatting with neighbors. — Zugzwang
Perhaps 'impersonal' reasons were always about appealing to the other's personal reasons. — Zugzwang
One necessary condition is that there be a sufficient richness of vocalizations already present for thinking to be able to do anything at all. Otherwise as you say it would just be playing sounds in the head to no effect. — hypericin
I think it would be fair to say that with the development of agriculture in exchange for security people lost their real freedom. Whether or not they knew that I don’t know. But those imposition on their freedom became more and more severe. In that sense I can see how it could be argued that agriculture and its consequences created “anxious man”. — Brett
But was it an acceptable trade off? Obviously if it was not we would not be talking about it. And if not agriculture what other innovation might have entered our world?
Yeah, that's the real crazy question, why did they?
Agriculture-based states existed only in very specific environmental conditions; conditions that minimized how much work was needed for agriculture to work, and conditions that offered no other obvious alternative. Ancient Mesopotamian city-states were dependent on the flooding of the Tigris and the Euphrates to do a lot of the hard work for them (but certainly not all of it); it would be unimaginable to see a city-state in a different environment, like the mountains.
But even still, ancient Mesopotamia was not a desert, and there were plenty of other alternatives to agriculture nearby to the rivers at the time (unlike how the region is today, which is an arid desert). Many people were able to live outside of and independent of the states, and many tried to escape as well. If agriculture-based societies were an obvious benefit to anyone, why were the majority of humans living outside of them for the majority of human history, and why were so many people trying to escape? — darthbarracuda
Contrary to your point about walking away, though, the historical evidence we have actually shows that people running away from early states was a serious problem for these states. Malnourishment, epidemics, heavy taxes, slavery, wars, back-breaking and onerous labor, inequality, hierarchies, all of this stuff is what you find in states. People had no good reason to stay and so they frequently took flight. The prestige of a state was reflected not so much in how much land it had but in how big their population was. Cities built walls not just to keep enemies out, but to keep the residents in.
And if you are raised in a state, you are basically domesticated and so you don't really know how else to live outside of the conditions of the state. If all you know is farming, then even if there are plenty of other resources available from different methods, you are out of luck. — darthbarracuda
Right, this exactly. Humans are adapted to an environment that doesn't exist anymore: the savanna of eastern Africa as it was during the Pleistocene for hundreds of thousands of years. Around 12,000 years ago that environment disappeared, and by all normal rights humans would have disappeared with it, except that we had the unique cognitive ability to figure out how to adapt our memes -- in the Dawkins sense of units of learned behavior -- instead of just adapting our genes. And now we are masters of pretty much every environment on the planet, most of which were are terribly adapted for on a genetic level, but we make up for it on the memetic level. That memetic adaptation being: think about all the ways that things could go wrong, and act to minimize them, even if everything is fine right now. — Pfhorrest
↪darthbarracuda I think it's more that an agricultural lifestyle enabled state coercion than that state coercion created the agricultural lifestyle. If you didn't need agriculture, if you could just walk away from an abusive society and live comfortably in the wilderness with no loss to yourself, the state would be powerless over you. The state has to have something you need, and that's control of the capital you require to make a living. A true post-scarcity world would dissolve the impetus for capital and state alike, and likewise, a pre-scarcity world (like the Pleistocene environment we're adapted to) would have no impetus for them either. It's only when times get hard and people have to band together and figure out how to make the most out of scarce resources or else die that the strong men who can horde those resources to themselves unless you do what they say have any power. — Pfhorrest
Arguably, you’re talking about The Fall. — Wayfarer
I think that that kind of anxiety about the possibility of failure, the realization that everything won't necessarily be all right but could go horribly horribly wrong if we're not careful, is at the root of all philosophizing, in the broad sense of the quest for wisdom, where wisdom is the ability to discern true from false, good from bad, etc. And furthermore, that the realization of the need for such wisdom is the loss of "innocence" in the religious sense of the word. — Pfhorrest
So to react to your original post, early agricultural states were not based on an anxiety about the future and risk-aversion. Complete dependence on agriculture increased the risk of starvation. There was no good reason for anyone working the fields to be doing that, apart from coercion by the state. — darthbarracuda
Actually, definitely a violation of perfect duty to self. — tim wood
Then your statement has the form of a question, but not the substance. You have to decide what a question is. — tim wood
The asking of the question presupposes that some answer will satisfy the inquiry. But it does even more than that. It not only assumes that an appropriate response, such as "Trees exist", can be articulated by the interrogated, but that it sets itself apart from some other meaningful response, such as "Trees don't exist." — Adam's Off Ox
The idea is that if you ask, you're presupposing. If you're not presupposing, then it's a statement in the form of question, but not really a question, therefore nonsense. And not really a question because you're not really presupposing anything; i.e., the question is not about anything. — tim wood
Is it willful ignorance or an individual attempt to merely not acknowledge the issues of people in the black community? — Anaxagoras