Analytic philosophers focus too much on playing with concepts, and not enough on thinking about the parts of reality that matter." — Olivier5
I will be starting a thread later that is related to this one. I'll briefly explain myself here and make a fuller accounting in the other thread. The reason I won't post it here is because the thread will also address other ideas besides Analytical philosophy.
Now, Jersey already knows some of my thoughts on Analytical philosophy, an area where our views share some overlap, however I feel he has misinterpreted the meaning I was trying to convey. Which is my fault for not being substantive enough to do my own point justice.
What I have said, Privately; Analytic philosophers are very good at being half of a philosopher.
Now you'll probably be thinking "only a continental philosopher would say such a thing." But then you'd be making the same assumption I am about to demonstrate.
This statement may sound like an attack on analytic philosophy, but it's actually just an attack on some analytical philosophers. Which is a very important distinction to make.
Now Jerseys issues revolve around the behaviour of some analytic philosophers. He attributes the behaviour to analytical philosophy. This, is an assumption on his part that he has correctly identified the cause of the behaviours.
In order to demonstrate what I mean;
Lets say that X is a belief about philosophy.
Y is a belief about ethics.
Z is a questionable behaviour with a cause.
For the next part, I'm going to use some famous philosophers names as examples but will not be talking about their historically held beliefs, I'll just be saying their belief is X and/or Y for the purposes of the explanation.
Wittgenstein Believes X
Wittgenstein Believes Y
Wittgenstein Engages in Z
Socrates does not Believe X
Socrates Believes Y
Socrates engages in Z
Hume Believes in X
Hume does not Believe Y
Hume does not engage in Z
Dewey does not Believe in X
Dewey does not Believe in Y
Dewey does not engage in Z
Based on this, what causes Z?
X or Y?
Now so I'm not making a single cause Fallacy, let's assume that Socrates did not engage in Z. This would suggest that in order to engage in Z, one must believe in X and Y at the same time. Meaning the combination of X and Y creates another value, which we will call W, that we can say is the cause of Z.
Personally, I think that the problem isn't analytical philosophers in general. The problem is the beliefs some analytical philosophers have.
Like any tool, analytical philosophy has it's uses. It is down to the believer to make sure the belief is being applied correctly to the context. This will mean that sometimes it's useless, other times it will not be. We can never be certain if a tool is useless in a given situation when what may be stopping the tool from working is in fact another tool we are using along with it.
I can make pancake batter with a whisk and a bowl, I cannot cook pancakes without a pan and a heat source.
Which is why I say that analytical philosophers are very good at being half a philosopher. All that means is that a tool user is good at using his tool or he isn't. He can't do his job without all the tools he needs.
I can give you a tool, I can teach you how to use it. What I can't do, is tell you that it's a universally applicable tool. There may be some kind of job I've never done with that tool in order to find out it is useless.