Thanks. And when I look into the ancients or the moderns I like...it seems to me that not much has really been accomplished since. — ghost
If an anti-philosopher is sufficiently exciting, he gets interpreted as a philosopher. His demystifications are repackaged so that yet again experts are needed as sage-whisperers. Heidegger played into this big time. Wittgenstein's style in Philosophical Investigations is so informal and anti-systematic that it backfired! The anti-systematic point was presented so anti-systematically that experts are called in to connect the dots into a system. — ghost
FWIW, what I get from Wittgenstein is his disgust at the idea that the higher things can be treated scientifically. — ghost
Yes, pretty much everything concerning ethics and the mystical. — Wallows
I meant Epicurus, — ghost
I have read some K that I really liked. There's so much stuff by K that I think I need to find a great intro that skillfully chooses the highlights. — ghost
I thought it was great. I also like the stoics, Epicurus, etc. That said, it's nice to read later philosophers who wrote in powerful English. That's something like a maximum connection. — ghost
Because propositional attitudes have no epistemic content. Thus, philosophy is concerned with life as a practice and not a problem that can be solved. — Wallows
Fair point. And I don't agree with all of Hobbes' theories. But I would stress that he was 'actually' doing philosophy by concerning himself with something other than language and far more artificial problems. — ghost
What do you think of Hobbes? I'd call him one of the good guys, despite some of his stuff having aged. In Hobbes the subject/object game is downplayed, and he focuses on the practical use of the mind. — ghost
I justify that by insisting that the first critics of phantasms got it right. They are just either ignored or assimilated by the phantasm industry. — ghost
But what one often sees is Wittgenstein himself becoming part of the disease. The disease is a hungry Hegelian Hippo. — ghost
After Wittgenstein claimed that most of the problems of philosophy are due to the way we use language, he made the next bold claim and stated that the remainder are psychological. I pretty much agree with these assertions and think that many of the problems of philosophy, which are related to ethics are essentially about attitudes. Others might differ. — Wallows
If we take the phantasms too seriously, then we have to become ghostbusters who...only pay attention to the ghosts we are supposed to be busting. — ghost
What in my opinion happened is that a great deal of value in Greek and ancient philosophy got incorporated into Christian theology and was often seriously mis-translated in the process. So with the turn away from Christianity in Western culture, a great deal of the original philosophical insights were lost along with it. — Wayfarer
Another factor is that philosophy is profoundly rooted in history, particularly, the history of consciousness. By that I mean, the ancients lived in an imaginative universe utterly different from our own. This wasn't simply because they believed the world was held up by elephants or surrounded by crystal spheres. Rather it's because their conception of the man and nature was different to ours, in ways we can barely fathom. So being able to be critically aware of that, instead of (as is most usual) dismissing the ancients as scientifically uninformed, takes considerable imagination in its own right. — Wayfarer
Can you imagine a world full of people admiring Nietzsche? Not a pleasant world I think. — Wallows
I could say more, but that's enough for starters. (Although I have sometimes reflected that it's impossible for the same person to at once admire Nietzsche and Plato. And I admire Plato. — Wayfarer
My view is that even if philosophy does indeed comprise phantasms, they are nevertheless phantasms that continue to exert considerable influence over the mind. So just saying 'boo, phantasms', might not show any insight into what those phantasms are and why they are the subject of philosophy. In fact, in our day and age, I think that is the most common reason. — Wayfarer
So we get metaphysicks^2, metaphysicks^3, and so on. To play these 'anti-metaphysickal' games, one of course has to steeped in the lower levels of metaphysicks. — ghost
The criterion you've put forth here cannot account for moral discourse because being moral according to your criterion requires moral judgment(approval/disapproval). Not all discourse about acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour consists of such judgment. It is all moral discourse nonetheless. — creativesoul
What is the difference between being about thought, belief, and/or behaviour and being about acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour?
Perhaps that is what underwrites your invocation of "valuation"? — creativesoul
I hold that moral thought/belief can be prelinguistic on the basis that all things moral are about acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour.
You disagree on the basis that all moral thought/belief is moral judgment.
Does this capture one disagreement in a nutshell? — creativesoul
The difference is that I hold a minimalist criterion for what counts as being moral - in kind - whereas you hold a more complex notion of what counts as moral thought/belief. — creativesoul
We do agree regarding morality. Morality is codified moral thought/belief. Prelinguistic thought/belief that is moral - in kind - (on my view at least) is inadequate for morality. — creativesoul
There's far too much that we(seem to) agree upon to abandon the discussion. — creativesoul
Consider, that early in life, the infant begins to evaluate the desirable somewhere in the interplay of her nerve stimuli, and her emotional responses. As primitive as it is, this does constitute a valuation, despite the absence of any language skills. The primitive level in which value is imposed on emotional affection does not constitute a proper ethical judgement - it is more like an observation of what seems pleasing to me, rather than a moral choice about what I ought to do.
Then we can think about the toddler who has begun to acquire language. At this point, he is being linguistically conditioned (with some corporal conditioning) so that he can be assimilated into the culture to which he belongs. It is somewhere in this process that the evaluation of his primitive valuations commences; most importantly any evaluations of his primitive valuations are primarily acquired externally from culture, and not internally as a result of primitive valuation.
I hope this takes us one step closer to adequately understanding the source of morals. I could be mistaken, it's a terrible tragedy.
— Merkwurdichliebe
That's not a bad summary of pre linguistic thought/belief as it pertains to morals. — creativesoul
If the above claim is true, that truth is one, shouldn't conformity, based on the oneness of truth, be the rule rather than the exception? — TheMadFool