It might seem that a forum such as this would be ideal, but while it might help, there is a lot of very poor work hereabouts. Caution is needed. Autodidacticism can lead to eccentricity, or worse. — Banno
I’m capable of engaging in Philosophical discourse, but I want to being able to critically engage; for my own sake, better than the above average laymen — KantRemember
Sure.Unfortunately I doubt I’d be able to enrol in a course, *maybe* online, but I work full time. — KantRemember
I’m capable of engaging in Philosophical discourse, but I want to being able to critically engage; for my own sake, better than the above average laymen — KantRemember
I need to deep dive on every topic to get to a standard I’m happy with and be able to form and hold my own positions on them as such. — KantRemember
Your point on writing my own work and formulating my ideas is crucial to learning how to engage outside of just reading. So I will do that too. — KantRemember
Why are you interested? — Tom Storm
Everyone has their own style, but some form of this discipline helps one keep building on previous learning. — Paine
Okay, here's how i look at it: there's informal philosophy. This is anything: "What is life"?
And the there's formal philosophy, related to specific thinkers, which ends up being academic philosophy. — ProtagoranSocratist
The only philosophy course I took in college was Logic. And that was a math requirement. My interest in philosophy, post college, was mainly in looking for a substitute worldview to replace my childhood religious indoctrination. But I never had time to get into philosophy seriously until after retirement. And most of my autodidact education since college has been obtained from science books with a philosophical inclination.I haven’t a degree in philosophy (accounting and finance instead, 2023 graduate) but I’m highly, highly interested in it. — KantRemember
Some TPF posters are offended by my unorthodox views, but most accept a bit of oddity as typical of independent thinkers. — Gnomon
One issue with doing philosophy is that there are a plethora of views about what this discourse actually is, and many camps seem to resent or denigrate other camps. Some see it as a rigorous pursuit of truth, others as a language game, and still others as a form of personal or ethical guidance or self-help. Philosophy seems to be a tricky subject because its methods, goals, and even subject matter are endlessly contested, and what counts as philosophical in one tradition may be dismissed in another.
Why are you interested?
My interest came primarily from 3 things. 1. My desire to learn, think critically, and challenge myself, 2. A want to understand the nature of reality, and 3. It started a few years back with a deconversion from faith when questioning the rationality behind it all - that led to questions on morality, theology, which, naturally, led me down to ontological thought, and further, what it meant to know something. — KantRemember
I find it much more interesting trying to understand reality for what it is than attributing everything to a divine cause. That isn't to say doing so is wrong or there is no value in doing so, but I love the epistemic pursuit of figuring things out for ourselves. — KantRemember
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