if it is a statement about another statement — Tarskian
A theory is incomplete if it can express statements about its own statements. — Tarskian
If a statement can talk about other statements, then it can also talk about itself. — Tarskian
Hence, philosophy is a mathematical capability of the language at hand. — Tarskian
If a statement can talk about other statements, then it can also talk about itself. — Tarskian
So is English. — Lionino
That is not what the word 'philosophical' means, which goes back to my first post. — Lionino
Hence, philosophy is a mathematical capability of the language at hand. — Tarskian
I notice since you've joined that you have a strong tendency to devise your own definitions, interpretations and standards for what constitutes philosophy. — Wayfarer
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy
Academic definitions
Attempts to provide more precise definitions of philosophy are controversial[17] and are studied in metaphilosophy.[18]
Precise definitions are often only accepted by theorists belonging to a certain philosophical movement and are revisionistic according to Søren Overgaard et al. in that many presumed parts of philosophy would not deserve the title "philosophy" if they were true.[20]
Some definitions characterize philosophy in relation to its method, like pure reasoning.
Many definitions of philosophy emphasize its intimate relation to science.[24] In this sense, philosophy is sometimes understood as a proper science in its own right.
Other definitions focus on the contrast between science and philosophy.
Another definition characterizes philosophy as thinking about thinking to emphasize its self-critical, reflective nature.[31]
Overgaard, Gilbert & Burwood 2013, pp. 36–37, 43, What Is Philosophy?
Nuttall 2013, p. 12, 1. The Nature of Philosophy
No sooner would that be done than philosophy will then be about undermining that very definition.One goal of metaphilosophy is to finally discover a usable definition for philosophy. — Tarskian
A statement is philosophical, if it is a statement about another statement. — Tarskian
Anyway, the definition you offer is trivially too broad. "John said it is raining" is about a statement, but not philosophy. — Banno
You missed the point of my post. Any definition will be contradicted by some philosophy.If this is a problem, then how can we exclude it from the definition? — Tarskian
"Know thyself"....find a statement that is philosophical but that does not satisfy the definition — Tarskian
"The world is all that is the case". It is a statement about the world, which is a physical fact. — Tarskian
So are you claiming that these sentences, each famously part of important philosophical discussions, are actually not philosophical?
You sure you want to do that? — Banno
Or is it a statement about the meaning of words? Like a definition is about the meaning of words.
Oh dear - it looks like your topic is not philosophical according to your own definition. Does that trouble you at all? — unenlightened
So you agree it is philosophical, but it is not a statement about another statement, and so doesn't meet your definition. — Banno
Your definition of "philosophy" seems to include things unnecessary and insufficient to philosophy. — Banno
And you proposed
isPhilosophical(#S) IFF S is about another statement.
And I gave examples of statements that were about other statements, but not philosophical, and statements that are philosophical, but not about other statements.
So your definition is void. — Banno
I think that the definition of the term philosophy is a philosophical question. The literature even terms it a "metaphilosophical" question. — Tarskian
"The world is all that is the case". It is a statement about the world, which is a physical fact. — Tarskian
What is your objective here? — Jaded Scholar
This suggests that your definition is formulated in a specific context, but that you think it has consequences for philosophy more widely. I'm not clear whether you consider the possibility of that extension to be a philosophical thesis or not.The origin for what I write, is of course, the foundational crisis in mathematics. I believe that it sheds new light not just on metaphysics but also on metaphilosophy. — Tarskian
Wikipedia is not wrong, especially in this observation. I would question "often" unless someone can come up with a definition of philosophy that is universally accepted by philosophers. Your definition is no exception - it has a philosophical agenda and is constructed in the pursuit of that agenda. That's fair enough, until you claim that it is a definition of philosophy.Precise definitions are often only accepted by theorists belonging to a certain philosophical movement and are revisionistic according to Søren Overgaard et al. in that many presumed parts of philosophy would not deserve the title "philosophy" if they were true. — Wikipedia
That's merely a metastatement (@Lionino)a statement about another statement. — Tarskian
I'm not satisfied with this simplistic example but I think it works well enough. My point is that philosophy's sine qua non is her questions (even meta-questions) – the how what when & why of them – rather than any answers, or "statements". In Socratic manner, I think, philosophizing strives to reason to more probative questions (or more clear, precise formulations of a question) and not just the academic penchant for masturbating each other with cleverer and cleverer logical puzzles.Is the world (i e. a concept of "the world") deterministic or indeterministic?
If the world is deterministic, meaning that every event is caused by a prior event (i.e. non-random), then every person's choosing is epiphenomenal (or an illusion).
However, if the world is indeterministic, meaning that every event is uncaused (i.e. random), then, yet again, every person's choosing is epiphenomenal (or an illusion).
Suppose the world has both deterministic properties and indeterministic properties, meaning that any chain, or sequence, of events consists in alternating causal and noncausal relations, which therefore implies that every person's choosing is unconstrained-within-constraints, or compatible with the world conceived of having both deterministic and indetetministic properties.
Cutting to the chase, I suggest that you need to clarify in your own mind whether you wish to capture the existing use of the term "philosophy" or stipulate a definition to be used in a specific context. — Ludwig V
BTW, is meta-philosophy philosophy or not? - is that a philosophical question? It seems to be an extension of a concept that is used (and therefore defined) within a specific context, which may or may not be considered to be philosophical. — Ludwig V
Dogmatically, I would start by saying that philosophy is a practice (or a family of inter-related practices), the scope of which is effectively defined by what its practitioners do when they are philosophizing. — Ludwig V
One may compare music or the visual or performance arts, or even science itself. — Ludwig V
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