A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes. — Ludwig Wittgenstein
When a superior man hears of the Tao,
he immediately begins to embody it.
When an average man hears of the Tao,
he half believes it, half doubts it.
When a foolish man hears of the Tao,
he laughs out loud.
If he didn't laugh,
it wouldn't be the Tao. — Tao Te Ching
Suppose God exists. You ask him "why God did you make the world as it is?" He responds "I was just playing."
What's going to be your reaction? [Choices not restricted to one emoji]
1. :rofl:
2. :angry:
3. :cry:
4. :meh:
5. :gasp:
6. :worry:
7. :chin:
8. :brow:
9. :confused:
10. :pray:
11. :roll: — TheMadFool
I choose #1 :rofl: — Athena
The question is: what's happened to humour in philosophy? — Cuthbert
Lesser known logical fallacies:
Michael Scott fallacy – Using the phrase “That’s what she said.”
Family dog fallacy – Telling your opponent that your dog ate your argument.
In mater tua fallacy – Insulting your opponent’s mother
Appeal to personal authority fallacy – Using the phrase “Because I said so.”
Command fallacy – Defending your argument using the phrase “Shut up!”
StreetlightX fallacy – Using the phrase “Well, that’s how we do it in Australia.”
Conturbabimus illa ratio fallacy – Expressing your numerical arguments in base 7. — T Clark
:up:I think that all stand-ups (the good ones anyway), are philosophers, in their own right. Some better and deeper than others, but all philosophers nonetheless. — James Riley
I didn't realize till this quip, Fool, you're a closet-If philosophy is a joke, the punchline would be...Sophia doesn't love you back dear! :smile: — TheMadFool
I'm going to have to stay up with this thread. I love to laugh, even though I don't do it much. Anyway, I think that all stand-ups (the good ones anyway), are philosophers, in their own right. Some better and deeper than others, but all philosophers nonetheless. — James Riley
"Why is there something rather than nothing?" was "And if there were nothing? You'd still be complaining!" — Cuthbert
I think it is a good combination actually. humour helps us cope in practice with the absurdity of existence and jokes confront us with missmatches between our idealized world of aims, ideas and endeavours and the every day stumbling and fooling around we engage in in practice. — Tobias
Maybe. I personally dislike most stand up comedy, so I'm out. — Tom Storm
I guess you know Jonathan Miller as Bertrand Russell? — Cuthbert
How many here have seen the clip in "Monthy Python at the Hollywood Bowl", where they televise a soccer match between a team of classical Greek philosophers and a team of German philosophers?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LfduUFF_i1A — god must be atheist
If 'stand-up' calls to mind some guy wittering on about his flatmate's bathroom habits then I agree, but there's more to it than that, I promise. — Cuthbert
I find comedians generally too needy for love or hectoring bores. — Tom Storm
When it eventually comes out that such and such comedian is depressed, or committed suicide, somehow, it's not a surprise. — baker
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.