I am being sympathetic to your views as you can see from my various posts. — Manuel
I've take the view that I take with so many other issues: I can't know it all, and while I will not surrender my right to critically and analytically consider something, I will often suspend it. As stated in another thread, doubt does not preclude action. I'll defer to those I deem experts, in my own arbitrary and subjective vetting process. I've no interest in knowing everything. — James Riley
The main issue, to my mind, is whether your definition of metaphysics is actually correct or if your using the word in an idiosyncratic manner. — Manuel
All empirical philosophy in general and cognitive metaphysics in particular, is contained right there. If the world can do no other than present itself, the fundamental paid attention needs be only to oneself, by oneself, in the receipt of such presentation. The benighted psyches diminish, making intellectual sand kingdoms predicated on them less likely, by the quality of attention paid, and the world necessarily becomes unmasked in direct correspondence to it. — Mww
At the very least, even if only in humans, the agency that pays attention to itself can be supposed to contain the capacity to investigate itself, — Mww
I see two distinctions. The Scholar (those who study philosophers/philosophies with little to no bias in a dry and methodical manner) and the Thinker (those who just observe and play with their thoughts in regards to what is observed). — I like sushi
In regards to philosophy in general I genuinely think this is one area of human knowledge where we’d benefit if the field was more polarised between the two with fewer vying to claim hold of both ends. — I like sushi
But who is saying that a person just need to be alone in a room with zero stimulus or just go to the mountain hiking with no thoughts in mind? — Manuel
Of course this is Kafka's original thought not T Clark's. I wonder why Kafka thought that. Was he recommending avoidance of literature? Seeing is one thing; if you want to be good at communicating what you see, then obviously some familiarity with the ways other's have expressed their seeing will no doubt be helpful — Janus
This idea of cloistered genius demiurging their way to brilliance is just neoliberal entrepreneurial values transposed into philosophy like a virus. Self-aggrandizing laziness arrogated to the status of virtue. — StreetlightX
That's within a context of a certain experience and understanding. Everybody has these, it's kind of impossible no to, as long as you are alive. — Manuel
Stop reading, arguing, writing, building little intellectual kingdoms out of the sand of your benighted psyches.
— T Clark
I mean, the irony in this statement is dazzling. — StreetlightX
You're a pragmatist. We get that. Not everyone has to agree with your pragmatism. — Wheatley
The more interesting part is learning to think differently. Sometimes that's trying out different terms and categories, a specific change like that; sometimes it's seeing an entirely different sort of approach to an issue or a problem. — Srap Tasmaner
I suspect someone will come on here and blast away at the lack of discipline and seriousness this approach displays. And how important subjects require hard work to understand properly. But I sympathise and have not privileged academic philosophy in my life. Nevertheless, I have often been curious to get a better sense of what I may have missed. Why I'm here. — Tom Storm
no one makes any serious decisions in their life - who to live with, what house to buy, where to work, where to shop, who to vote for, etc - based on the problem of induction, whether math is discovered or invented, or if physicalism is false, etc. — Tom Storm
What do you think the philosophers that made contributions to science? Pierre-Simon Laplace, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, and Isaac Newton (just to name a few). Back then great thinkers that were empirical minded were called "natural philosophers". Currently (unfortunately?) "natural philosophy" has been largely replaced by "science". — Wheatley
Tell us, though, when ignorance was ever an indication that a job would be well done. — tim wood
we are never absolved from doing our own thinking if we don't wish to remain igorant. Nobody loves a regurgitator or an insistent mediocrity. — Janus
So the great philosophers are like insistent poets, quite often fucking annoying; but if you are in the right mood to brook the insistence, and flow with them where they want you to flow; something may come of it. — Janus
I can only recommend someone depending on what topic you're interested in. If most figures aren't connecting with you, I don't see the problem. — Manuel
shut up, sit still, think. — Bitter Crank
I find most philosophical writing to be pretty tedious, both in its content and its style. Most of it doesn't make any difference! — Bitter Crank
I imagine my ol’ buddy Father Guido Sarducci would say....that’s just farging beautiful, man. — Mww
I don't particularly like advertising this but, it's relevant to the OP. As someone who has a PhD in philosophy, I must say, I think you are 100% correct. "Philosophy" is much, much broader than the Western tradition, and insights come from all aspects of life.
I would only put in the caveat that I think topics like free will or materialism are interesting - to those that find them interesting, which includes me. However, if that's not something that floats your boat, then that's perfectly fine. — Manuel
It's a gnostic thing. You wouldn't understand. — James Riley
:smirk: — 180 Proof
Assuming that the Gnostics were (and still are) "onto something important" with the role of Gnosis in their perception of life, can it be considered legitimate wisdom? — Bret Bernhoft
The love that Herbert depicts is perfect. Is our human love capable of transforming ourselves or someone else? — Bitter Crank
Do people ever display exceptional love? Yes, sometimes. I wouldn't advise anyone to hold their breath waiting for an example of exceptional love, but it sometimes happens. When experienced, it is transformative — Bitter Crank
Nietzsche adored Emerson and called him his "twin soul". — Tom Storm
That is my biggest caveat against evangelical Christianity: all you’ve got to do is “repent” of your sin, which means you can sin all you want to...as long as you repent soon afterwards!...
...and as long as you confess belief in Jesus, you are saved, however much you may sin. James knew much better: “faith without works is dead.” And Jesus preached much better too. You may cry “Lord, lord,..” I did this or that in Your name, to gain significance among the faithful, but He replies, “I never knew you.” — Leghorn
Love your neighbor as yourself. How many who confess their faith in Jesus turn their backs on their neighbors? fail to stop for the guy carrying a gas can down the road? — Leghorn
The care offered by a professional is like being friendly without being a friend. It's an important distinction that probably needs to go with a lengthy dissertation on professional boundaries and the like. A professional offers care in the sense of a duty to provide a quality service that meets the person's needs, just as a reputable mechanic provides a quality service to a car that ensures it is safe to driver regardless of who the drive is. All very general I know. — Tom Storm
Why would it have been better had a pagan said it? — Bitter Crank
‘Truth, Lord; but I have marr’d them: let my shame
Go where it doth deserve.’
‘And know you not,’ says Love, ‘Who bore the blame?’
‘My dear, then I will serve.’
‘You must sit down,’ says Love, ‘and taste my meat.’
So I did sit and eat. — Bitter Crank
Who can dislike an epic poem which is yet endearing? — Michael Zwingli
I was wondering what are the thoughts of the community about this, let me know:) — Lea
I tend towards sentimentality in poetry — Michael Zwingli
don't know if you have ever read this one (I'd be surprised, since it is fairly well known), but it's long been a favorite of mine. It is a statement about human nature thought processes, and interactions. — Michael Zwingli
How hopeless under ground
Falls the remorseful day. — Bitter Crank
There are sensations unknowable to science. We only know the human ones because we have them. Otherwise, humans would be like bats, to an alien or AI science lacking those sensations. — Marchesk
But bats may experience sonar in a way that's entirely different from any of our sensations. It's just an example. — Marchesk
Surely there are sensations we have no idea about. — Marchesk
So you think learning bat language would give us sonar sensations? — Marchesk
So you're saying if a bat could talk sonar, we would understand it? — Marchesk
The controversy would be over color sensation, not the physics of EM radiation. Same problem we have when discussing bat sonar sensation, except bats have no language to name it for us.
Mary's species wouldn't know anything about color the same way we don't know anything about whatever sensation bats have when experiencing sonar. — Marchesk
