You probably shouldn't let us in on that... :eyes:
— Baden
Oh, crap. I promise to but more effort into my OP's from now on, and stick to the guidelines.
:fear: — Purple Pond
Even if the arguments are not your own, you should still describe at least some of the ideas surrounding the topic in some detail. We normally delete short OPs based on questions alone as it suggests the OP writer hasn't thought much about the issue and will hardly be able to contribute much less lead the conversation. — Baden
We can discuss that. I suggest posting a draft of your OP here, and then we can comment on it. We already had two attempts at it. Hopefully we can create at least one quality discussion out of this.
The starter of a thread usually takes responsibility, no ? To fully engage...
— Amity
There's only so much a discussion creator can do. The rest is up to the participants. — Purple Pond
Wow, all this work and we have yet to created a single discussion. I'm not sure it's worth the effort. Oh, well, I still think it's fun. :grin: — Purple Pond
However, if your definition was used to start an exploration in a very general sense, then hopefully that would inspire specific examples. Either from posters' life experience or particular philosophy/ philosophers.
What do you think ?
— Amity
All for it. :up: — Baden
All you have to do is present your idea for discussion, and hopefully someone else will take up the challenge and create a good discussion. — Purple Pond
We can probably leave me out of the title I think. But your comment is much appreciated. :smile: — Baden
If I were to write the OP, I would probably set it up as an exploration of what happiness is in a very general sense first then focus in on specific examples or experience as they become relevant in the progress of the discussion. ButI wouldn't want to make it about my biography. :monkey: — Baden
Happiness: Something like the proper mixture of sensitivity, creativity and strength achieved through habit and self-reflection; a self-sustaining stability of not-wanting rather than the result of procuring something wanted; the satisfaction that comes with focusing outwards on a regular basis while recognizing choice and freedom in each moment in the context of a healthy and active imagination; originality in identity and character in a way that fosters same in others; consistent quality in thought and action.
A promising topic imo. — Baden
"It is equally interesting to discuss matters sexually, rather than to discuss sexual matters."
How would that work ... everything would be sexual innuendo! — Kippo
am pretty confident that post is somebody's homework, and they were just trying to get somebody on the forum to do it for them. Note how it just has two questions, written in the way that homework questions usually are. It contains no thoughts, suggestions or anything to indicate that the poster has thought about or is even interested in the topic.
If Baden hadn't already closed the thread I would have reported the post. — andrewk
And be sarcastic as much as humanly possible, although it'll be lost on someone like me, because I have Asperger's syndrome. — S
It is more interesting, IMO, to discuss matters philosophically, rather than to discuss philosophical matters.
Well they are different discussions so I suppose a preference is inevitable. One is harder to engage with I guess, but worth the effort no doubt. — Kippo
How to start a philosophical discussion, per typical Internet discussions:
No matter what someone said, both (a) disagree with them, and (b) tell them that what they said (i) isn't adequate and (ii) isn't clear. (Nevermind that you're supposedly disagreeing with something you didn't quite understand per (b)(ii)--if they catch that, or no matter what they say, really, simply repeat (a) and (b).) — Terrapin Station
Well, I don't think there are any issues anymore. So, let's wait to hear from Fooloso4... — Wallows
Disgraceful. Continuing false allegations against Fooloso4. And the ignoring of same.
— Amity
I never said anything against Fooloso4. I even said in my previous comments that I think he is right.
Anyway, I hope Fooloso4 might be able to contribute more to these issues. Quite interested in his input. — Wallows
I think that he is doing a good job, but partly. For the other part, its really bad: he makes his own views pass as W's, most commonly they appear at the end of a paragraph.
— Pussycat
What do you disagree with? — Wallows
I am attempting to follow the Tractatus step by. What W. presents is already a distillation, which I have further reduced to a set of quotes followed by my own brief comments. In what follows I will first restate those comments and then tie it all together. — Fooloso4
My hope for this discussion is for anyone who has knowlage or insight on the physical manifestation of energy through a spiritual or mental reserve to share their thoughts. — Reverie of Renaissance
I think the point of writing a novel is to entertain people in some way.
— Andrew4Handel
Ideally, the point of writing a novel (worth anything) is to give a reader something they couldn't have got without reading it, whether that be a type of unique experience or knowledge or whatever form of edification. If it's to be worth anything of lasting value, it wouldn't be simply another entertainment, of which there is no shortage and that can be got at a moment's notice just about anywhere. It's not elitist to recognize that or to try to understand the value that's placed on classics. — Baden
A problem I have had with fiction is that it seems like lying
— Andrew4Handel
If the reader knows it's fiction, it's not a form of deceit, so whatever form of lying remains is fairly harmless. — Baden
My idea of a philosophical novel is one that makes a clear proposition or arguments and defends it. I think any novel can feel philosophical or inspire philosophical thought. — Andrew4Handel
But I just wanted to know a specific explicit argument like the one contained in The Matrix derived from one of these novels. If you want to encourage people to read these works it is worth giving an interesting summary of what to expect. — Andrew4Handel
It might be a good idea to try to be more sensitive with absolute newbies wrt exemplifying their poor OPs though. I hadn't considered that when I was modding this one and was thinking more about all the OPs I had recently just deleted and wanting to get the message out there that we were looking for more effort. — Baden
Pirsig is very hot on the dynamic/static distinction in relation to 'quality'. It's complicated, and a bit off topic.
the TLP is two dimensional. But, that's how language seems to operate.
— Posty McPostface
Well there you have it, language is two dimensional, but it operates - and operates recursively, and that makes it dynamic. So there is TLP, the last word in philosophy, and the fact that the limits of expression have been expressed extends the limits of expression, so that they cease to be the limits, though there are still limits. ( I'm struggling at my own limits of expression here, but if I can make this understandable, then it becomes possible to explore further again.) Looking at the picture of language as a picture, I see something that has been unclear, become clear. So my world has changed.
I might have a go at a separate thread if I can find the right levers... I think I'm talking about transformations of insight - awakenings. — unenlightened
If you paid them like bankers, judges, and politicians, they would be perfect in every way. — unenlightened
In the meantime, if you follow the guidelines, you won't go far wrong, and even if sometimes someone gets away with not following them, that does not entitle you to do the same. — unenlightened
So, this leads me to believe that you know nothing, or very little, about metaphysics, or philosophy for that matter, and you are just doing guess work here.
— Pussycat
Believe whatever you want about me, but pay attention to the text. Where does the text contradict anything I have said about it? Where have I made a false step?
Therefore I am sorry, but I won't be discussing anything more with you, not before you you do a bit of studying first at least, to get the basic philosophical concepts cleared out.
— Pussycat
That is uninformed, condescending, and evasive. The real problem here is that if my analysis is right then some of your basic claims about the text are wrong. And so, instead of addressing my analysis you create a smokescreen. — Fooloso4
A possibly more esteemed opinion of the matter is available here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihuJM8wVJw4. — Luke
The Guardian article cited by Amity is very helpful in addressing your question. — Fooloso4
I have chosen Nietzsche because I feel for what I have read so far that he is very misunderstood. — Helen G
I apologise for offending anyone with Mis-spelling his name or the mention of Hitler. But we all have to start somewhere and I thought this would be a good place. My presentation is a mere five minutes long — Helen G
Reviving the short story competition seems a good idea to me as long as admins are allowed to participate. :up: — Baden
In any case, it is rare to find metaphor and mythology mixed freely with observations of what "is" as is done with such abandon in the Republic. I don't think the "noble lie" applies to all the observations made in the Republic. But it influences it in every place.
There are so many indictments of character made in varying levels of subtlety that make me think I am not just being sold a bill of goods but am reading a diagnosis.
6 days ago — Valentinus
I wonder if you can show me any examples [ edit: of bolded part ]. I am interested in reading the Republic.
— Amity
I thought about different passages to quote but the quality I am singling out is a way to hear what is being said more than a thesis. I argued for a thesis in my previous citations because my interpretation was challenged. Fair enough. But I am more interested in the listening part of my own idea than ruling out other readings. — Valentinus
don't know what I would say to someone about writing a short story or a poem, — Baden