What is the case rests on rules, criteria, norms — Joshs
... the creative misreading of two Wittgenstein quotes. — plaque flag
the world is that minimal something that a self can be wrong about. ...What is the case is endlessly revisable. — plaque flag
Such norms are appealed to in order to instigate their modification. That's what philosophers do. — plaque flag
What is the intention of the philosopher ? To impose a claim, establish as a premise for further use, stack one more brick on the tower. — plaque flag
It came into my head today as I was thinking about my philosophical work and saying to myself: “I destroy, I destroy, I destroy– (CV, page 21)
Where does our investigation get its importance from, since it seems only to destroy everything interesting, that is, all that is great and important? (All the buildings, as it were,leaving behind only bits of stone and rubble.) (Big Typescript #88)
Working in philosophy–like work in architecture in many respects–is really more a working on oneself. On one’s own interpretation. On one’s way of seeing things. (And what one expects of them.) (CV 16)
And yet that's 'what's right' with it! — 180 Proof
So were you suggesting that perhaps his thinking is a bit insular and self-referential? — Joshs
You left me with a quote but it would require a new thread to even begin to do it justice. — Joshs
So, I believe that we have to give philosophy a new opportunity for its "evolution". — Alkis Piskas
Unless of course the dualism you are presupposing — Joshs
Here’s a little secret (don’t let it get around). Learning how to think is a prerequisite for learning how to live. Pursuing ideas for their own sake is pursuing life for its own sake. — Joshs
To complain about the specialization of philosophy is to insist it be a less serious kind of investigation than it is --- the kind that doesn't get anywhere, doesn't get more complex with time. — plaque flag
To me this resentful anti-intellectualism is what takes philosophy to be a mere hobby ... — plaque flag
But trying to impose one's personal lazy limits on professionals is childish. — plaque flag
Here, too, we should then have to abandon any claim to immediate intelligibility.
However, we should still have to· listen, because we must think what is inevitable, but preliminary
Here’s a little secret. Don’t let it get around. Learning how to think is a prerequisite for learning how to live. Pursuing ideas for their own sake is pursuing life for its own sake. — Joshs
Whatever was he doing in Syracuse, then? — Ciceronianus
Even in the quote from the PI there is still a kind of logic built into the actions, it's harder to define, granted, but it's still there. — Sam26
When I speak of logic, I'm not referring to formal logic, but the logic that is seen in our actions. — Sam26
when I leave my house I don't try to walk through walls, — Sam26
go and read the Stanford Encyclopedia entry on "comensurability" — RolandTyme
assessing what other people are trying to say — RolandTyme
Is it possible some philosophers when writing run out of ideas, but continue writing? — jgill
I agree that there are other factors involved, but there would be no game of chess without the rules that dictate how, for e.g., a bishop moves. — Sam26
We can easily imagine people amusing themselves in a field by playing with a ball like this: starting various existing games, but playing several without finishing them, and in between throwing the ball aimlessly into the air, chasing one another with the ball, throwing it at one another for a joke, and so on. And now someone says: The whole time they are playing a ball-game and therefore are following definite rules at every throw.
And is there not also the case where we play, and make up the rules as we go along? And even where we alter them as we go along.
I am not both Arne and Pantagruel. — Arne
How can any of us even say philosophy went wrong without having some shared understanding of what we mean by philosophy? — Arne
Such tensions have always been in philosophy. — Arne
...it would be unreasonable to expect me not to use the term "philosophy" when responding to a post about how philosophy "went wrong." — Arne
And just to be clear, none of us is any more qualified than the other to talk about those philosophical contemplations that were not committed to writing. That is just kind of a non-starter. — Arne
But nobody's permission is required. — Arne
How could I possibly speak to those that did not result in writings? — Arne
The actual amount of historical time in which philosophy per se was about "contemplation of the beautiful and the good" is actually quite minimal — Arne
And as far as I know, aesthetics and ethics are still lively subject matter. — Arne
Are you suggesting that philosophy should be more limited in its subject matter or that it would become so if not dominated by the academy and/or industrial forces? — Arne
How can any of us even say philosophy went wrong without having some shared understanding of what we mean by philosophy? — Arne
Philosophy is not an end in itself, it is a tool. — Pantagruel
This addendum would have made me appreciate the original OP more. — Pantagruel
I was using commensurable in the technical sense - able to be measured on the same scale. — RolandTyme
if things can be aggregated, and are commensurable, then you can freely substitute them for each other. — RolandTyme
As worthy as the "contemplation of the beautiful and the good" may be, it was never a philosophical paradigm. — Arne
there has always been philosophy as industry. — Arne
But I think that an argument can be made that original thinkers can be spoiled (not to say damaged) by going through the academic process. — Manuel
How would philosophy look different if philosophy had not "went wrong"? — Arne
how can we expect original work to arise? — Manuel
unless the incentives of university departments change — Manuel
Because that generalization clearly doesn't hold for the entire spectrum of philosophical writing. — Pantagruel
Because you haven't offered any suggestions for reconciliation or remediation of the issue — Pantagruel
... a hyperactive productivist churn of scholarship ...
Once knowledge and goodness were divorced...
Nihilism is the concept of reason separated from the concept of the good.
Criticism is only valid if it is balanced. — Pantagruel
Philosophy has become in large part insular and self-referential. — Fooloso4
Who in particular do you have in mind? — Joshs
(Writing and Difference, "Ellipses")Here or there we have discerned writing: a nonsymmetrical division designated on the one hand the closure of the book, and on the other the opening of the text. On the one hand the theological encyclopedia and, modeled upon it, the book of man. On the other a fabric of traces marking the disappearance of an exceeded God or of an erased man. The question of writing could be opened only if the book was closed. The joyous wandering of the graphein then became wandering without return. The opening into the text was adventure, expenditure without reserve.
In my view … everything hangs on grasping and expressing the true not just as substance but just as much as subject.
By substance, I mean that which is in itself, and is conceived through itself: in other words, that of which a conception can be formed independently of any other conception. (Ethics , Part One, Definitions, III)
At the same time, it is to be noted that substantiality comprises within itself the universal, or, it comprises not only the immediacy of knowing but also the immediacy of being, or, immediacy for knowing.
However much taking God to be the one substance shocked the age in which this was expressed, still that was in part because of an instinctive awareness that in such a view self-consciousness only perishes and is not preserved.
I think philosophy got hijacked by the universities. — Ying
Philosophy is not an end in itself, it is a tool. — Pantagruel
I can't help but hold the view that reality is an act of constructionism - we can't identify absolute truth (which is likely a remnant of Greek philosophy and Christianity) and philosophical positions we might hold appear to be culturally located. — Tom Storm
I think we can still create tentative notions of 'the good' based on secular mechanisms — Tom Storm
We no longer have a place in the cosmos - science tells us (or at least so it is thought) that life originated by a fluke combination of chemicals clustered around geo-thermal vents and then evolved by chance rather than design (and no, I'm not promoting ID theory, but the sense of life as essentially a product of chance, with no purpose other than survival and procreation, is one of the characteristics of nihilism.) — Wayfarer
Would not the concept of beautiful and how one sees it depend upon one's wisdom? — Tom Storm
