What's your definition of violence? — TheMadFool
philosophy is about the fundamental topics that lie at the core of all other fields of inquiry, broad topics like reality, morality, knowledge, justice, reason, beauty, the mind and the will, social institutions of education and governance, and perhaps above all meaning, both in the abstract linguistic sense, and in the practical sense of what is important in life and why
Philosophy is not Ethics
I hold that there are analogues to the physical sciences, what we might call the ethical sciences, that I consider to be outside the domain of philosophy, in that they appeal to specific, contingent hedonic experiences in the same way the physical sciences appeal to specific, contingent empirical experiences.
Violence, it seems, is defined as physical force intended to damage or destroy a person. — TheMadFool
You have a very limited view of violence. The father who hits his child does not do so to destroy him, but to correct him. And he is violent. In the same way, the champions of violence are not exactly materialistic. The Holy Inquisition and other Christian institutions - if we stick to only one well-known religion - rank first in destroying people and they did it for their own good. And they were violent people.What I'm driving at is that violence seems to be born of a materialistic philosophy - a physical object annoys you and you attack that object physically — TheMadFool
Actually, a teacher does a lot of things. Wiping wet noses, for example. But his institutional task is mainly to evaluate, classify and exclude. These are forms of domination sustained with institutional violence. This violence is often symbolic when the teacher qualifies with categories of scholars: "He lacks intelligence", "She is lazy", "He is not prepared for...", "She lacks discipline".... Or even more sophisticated means: IQ and other "objective" tests.Is that possible to show explicitly that a teacher is exercising a sort of micro-power while teaching a class? She is not entirely focused on controlling the marginal students of her class. — Number2018
Not exactly. He was against the marxist-anarchist theory of the class state as center of any repression. His model is a network without a unique focus. With his panoptic model he gives is an account of repression that has not ever resort to physical violence. See his criticism of asylums coercions as electroshocks, straitjackets or lobotomies. What is new in him is that the same model included also behaviourism, a form of control that uses psychological techniques more than violence.Foucault tried to make it clear that his conception of power has nothing in common with its violent or repressive theories. — Number2018
Of course, he does when passing over the patient freedom. Of course, he does when passing over the patient freedom. Foucault was very critic with the legal powers of "experts" in psychiatry and other "sciences", for example.So, for example, does a psychologist (who is completely unaware of being an instrument of power) apply “the techniques of controlling, monitoring and punishing” while consulting a patient? — Number2018
Institutional and structural violence:Could you bring a few concrete examples? — Number2018
Overt and covert violence:Violence can be physical and psychological. It can characterize personal actions, forms of group activity, and abiding social and political policy. This book includes all of these aspects within its focus on institutional forms of violence. Institution is also a broad category, ranging from formal arrangements such as the military, the criminal code, the death penalty and prison system, to more amorphous but systemic situations indicated by parenting, poverty, sexism, work, and racism. — Deane Curtin & Robert Litke : Institutional Violence
How Sartre's perspective on violence was different from the 'classical' marxist view? — Number2018
But look how poetically you express this! — path
And he allows you to look for any sense in your way.Its flowers the tenderness of patient minds,
And every evening I slow down a reduction of the blinds. — Wilfred Owen
Man is a useless passion. — Jean-Paul Sartre
Note that you use metaphors of poison and honey here. I suggest that human cognition is largely metaphorical, or let's say meta-floral. In your speaking for pure Cartesian-ism...and against the poison/honey of rhetoric and floral games, you use figurative language.
What if a 'pure' non-figurative non-rhetorical language or rationality was a fiction from the very beginning? — path
whereas, in fact, a prejudiced proposition, idea, or "suggestion," which is generally their heart's desire abstracted and refined, is defended by them with arguments — Nietzsche
What I dislike about the pejorative use of 'sophistry' is it's one way we might hide ourselves from such perspectives. It's in our interest to keep our network of beliefs and desires sufficiently stable. — path
I side much more with Aristotle's view on this matter, viewing logic and rhetoric as complimentary to each other, not in competition. — The Codex Quaerentis: On Rhetoric and the Arts
The pejorative sense of “sophistry” that I’m aware of, the one associated with a negative sense of “rhetoric” (which I wasn’t intending to use, but David Mo seems to mean), seems to be of discursive partners who are uninterested in discovering together what is or isn’t actually a correct answer to the questions at hand, but instead simply in WINNING: convincing everyone that they were right all along, whether or not they really are. — Pfhorrest
I think it is frequently not by solving but by dissolving an apparently intractable problem, — Pfhorrest
I agree that the art of rhetoric is important, and I suggest that it's always been central. — path
It's the last part that has me thinking you're more of a positivist. — Xtrix
Because I (1) don't believe any of those criteria are "precise," and (2) I see both philosophy and science as also similar in certain respects:
1) They are so precise than you had been unable to put an example of a philosopher using this methods. 2) Don't change of subject. No one is speaking of some similarities (although your list includes some wrong similarities -is world rational???) We are speaking of many things that separate science from philosophy.
— Xtrix
At this point one begins to get dizzy from your continuous changes of position. You did not define philosophy as being "concerned with some aspect of being", but as an occupation on the " Being qua Being", that is, what is universal in being. Obviously, all philosophers who have dedicated themselves to a specific philosophical specialty and not to metaphysical ontology, do not concern themselves with the being qua being and remain outside your definition.But if they're philosophers, then they don't study ethics or beauty or knowledge in a vacuum. If they do, then yes I wouldn't consider them philosophers at all. I'd call them perhaps "teachers" or even "scientists," concerned with whatever domain of beings they're interested in without any questioning of being. — Xtrix
I'm sorry I don't have time for the huge task of correcting your comments. I'm probably not qualified either. But if this is any indication: you did not understand (I think you still do not) the concept of intuition in Kantian philosophy and its consequences in contemporary philosophy. Nor did you know the importance of controlled experimentation in the emergence of the New Science. You claim to be Heideggerian, but you do not handle the concepts of the ontological and ontic as Heidegger does. Etc., etc., etc.Well then please point them out -- I'm happy to learn. — Xtrix
Perhaps take up your inquiry there, I am otherwise busy. — Pop
Superposition cannot be described as material.
Quantum fields cannot be described as material. — Pop
I think it's good that the meanings of a word evolve, as long as it's not in a confusing way.Consciousness is an evolving concept. — Pop
Consciousness is not a thing so much as a phenomena. A whole body , immaterial phenomena. However cellular microtubules sound promising as a possible location where the main action takes place – on an immaterial quantum level. — Pop
If the soul were something different from the body, it would have no problem depriving itself of the senses. It would be freer. But the soul's dependence on the senses is such that by depriving itself of them it ceases to function and decomposes. And I say soul because the theory of the body as a prison of the soul is typical of Christian Platonism via St. Augustine.Because it is locked onto the body and is deprived of sensation. — EnPassant
The mind is aware by itself. The body, which is an imitation of a mind, — EnPassant
I agree with your first sentence.Consciousness is not a physical thing like blood or oxygen, we know where those are held. It is an actualization of things that are physical and metaphysical including senses, memories, and concepts such as time — Outlander
No science deals with the Being as a Being. Each science has its own particular field. If you think the opposite, give an example. Do you know of any scientific article published in a scientific journal dedicated to the Being as a Being?philosophy is ontological while science is ontical. That's not the same thing, no, but you can't do one without the other. — Xtrix
So citing what "contemporary philosophers do" is a good argument against philosophy being ontological. Why? — Xtrix
Philosophy is what contemporary philosophers do. This is essentially your response to my (and Heidegger's) statement that philosophy is ontological. — Xtrix
I could point out a few things you've written that an expert in philosophy would not have said. You haven't studied philosophy in a faculty and it shows. It's not serious. I'm not a philosopher by profession either, and this is not a forum for professionals. But I'm not trying to belittle amateurs like me. It's not humility. It's common sense. Because sometimes they can show me that I'm arguing about things that I don't master and if I've pretended before that I'm the wisest I'd be very embarrassed. It's a matter of self-esteem.If I've made mistakes, you've certainly not demonstrated them in this discussion — Xtrix
I'm not saying philosophy and science are the same. — Xtrix
You can define them any way you like, without evidence, and be satisfied with that. If you want them to be completely separate, that's fine. — Xtrix
So we're now appealing to intuition and common sense? Come on. I prefer a historical perspective, with plenty of evidence. — Xtrix
Maybe this is all a matter of common sense. Don't be so dismissive of common sense, because even philosophers use it. Sometimes quite badly. But the intuition of which the text I quoted spoke was not that of common sense, but the old philosophical intuition, that of Kant or Descartes: the immediate grasp of something as evident in itself. Or do you have many reasons for distinguishing white from black? Do you not distinguish them immediately? It would be surprising.The point stands exactly as it was at the beginning of this digression: philosophy and science do appear very different, but there's no rule or method to determine which is which - — Xtrix
tween science and philosophy, and I don’t agree at all that philosophy is just about speculation. Speculative philosophy happens when philosophy tries to cross over into the domain of science, without “doing as the scientists do” when there. — Pfhorrest
And this is not a good argument. — Xtrix
You've chosen the worst example of all for your interests. Descartes was fully aware of the difference between his metaphysics and his treatise on optics. In the former his reasoning was philosophical-metaphysical, in the latter he boasted of having done a hundred experiments before affirming a thesis. According to your own definition you will not find in the Metaphysical Meditations -or the Principles of Philosophy if you like- any trace of falsiability, predictive power, duplicability, use of mathematics, and so on... which according to yourself are properly scientific activities. When Descartes proposes a universal method is not thinking in pure science, but a philosophy similar to science in rigor. Of course, he failed because he was thinking in deductive forms. He was not for nothing the clearest example of 17th century rationalism.Principles of Philosophy, by Descartes. — Xtrix
Just because France and Spain have relations does not mean that they are the same state. Ditto for philosophy and science.Because if they are so clearly distinct, why the confusion about which is which? — Xtrix
Because of the mistakes you make, I don't see that you know so much about the history of philosophy in general and of that of the last centuries in particular to give lessons to others. This is a forum for philosophy amateurs and we all have our limits. To discuss it in depth, go to a postgraduate master's degree. You will see that things are quite different.You have to know something about these subjects beforehand, and this means not only knowing the questions and problems about which they're concerned, but their history as well. — Xtrix
I doubt that anyone here is claiming science and philosophy to be mutually exclusive in any particular respect. — bongo fury
Try 'The Pattern Paradigm'. — A Seagull
Not the proponents of eudaimonia, of course. Because they combine virtue with duties (See Aristotle or Marcus Aurelius). Your refusal to include duties, your extremist concept of virtue does.Proponents of eudaimonia and of virtue ethics don't decide what is good from their absolute interior, — Ciceronianus the White
I didn't mean to, obviously. I was pointing out a logical link between duty and right. You turn it into reciprocity as causality. Don't change the premises, please.This makes being good sound like an exchange, or bargain-- — Ciceronianus the White
Conflict is the essence of human relationships in times of scarcity. It will arise whenever individualism is encouraged against community. Rights theory, like any other theory, will encourage conflict when rights are seen only in an individualistic way and cooperation when the emphasis is on collective rights. A basic human problem is to find the right balance between them.For me, it's the concept of moral rights which invites selfishness, — Ciceronianus the White
Not that I should be good because someone has a right. It's that choosing to be good involves analytically recognizing the rights of others.Why not just be good, or do the right thing, without looking to some divine command or law, or something else beyond your control or belonging in some sense to someone else, as compelling you to do so? — Ciceronianus the White
Yes, he is. His writings are not restricted to the history of science. — Xtrix
It appears "intuitively fairly clear," yes. — Xtrix
By the way, this is not a good distinction. Most contemporary philosophy does not deal with Being as Being, but with particular branches: philosophy of science, anthropology, philosophy of history, ethics, etc. You have an archaic concept of philosophy as the old metaphysics.Science is "ontical" in that it studies various domains of beings: nature, matter, life, humans, etc
Philosophy, or metaphysics, is ontological in that it thinks being. — Xtrix
Experimentation is often involved in the natural sciences, but a great deal isn't. Controlled, careful observation is also important. I'd say the peer review process is also a very important one. Falsiability, predictive power, duplicability, the use of mathematics, and so on...all very important. — Xtrix
. It's only a vaguely defined word, — Xtrix
Well, it is conceivable that in principle one could have a duty that is not toward another person, — Pfhorrest
But like I've said before, a major difference is that one is ontological, the other ontical. Here I agree with Heidegger. — Xtrix
That leaves us only in disagreement about the existence of a scientific method as being the distinguishing factor between philosophy and science. — Xtrix
Chomsky is also a historian. — Xtrix
No. I'm excluding from science everything that can't be proven by controlled experience. Metaphysics is just another case. And that is not a matter of mere definition. It's a real difference between ways of knowing: it can be proven or not.All you're doing is defining anything that can't be "proven" as "metaphysical." — Xtrix
I'm also very impressed that you put his full name. — Xtrix
So you recognize that there is a clear difference between the method of science and that of philosophy? Case closed."Intuitively fairly clear." Sure, who would disagree? — Xtrix
Hey, didn't you say there was a clear difference between the scientific method of experimentation and observation? Now there is no difference?You still haven't shown there is a method. — Xtrix
One can speak in prose without knowing the difference between prose and poetry. . Moliére.So they apply this "method" how? Unconsciously? — Xtrix