Streetlight
Galuchat
The fields of engineering and evolution provide further examples in which solutions always 'exceed' the problems from which they are born. Thus a wind turbine, a dam, and a coal powered fuel plant can be considered 'solutions' to the problem of generating energy...
Thinking about problems in this way has a few advantages. For one, it 'dynamizes' problems, keeping them 'open' such that problems are not static artefacts to be solved once and for all, but instead force creative and ongoing engagement. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
So, a problem is dynamic if it has more than one solution? — Galuchat
frank
While this is a tidy way to understand the nature of problems, it is also an exceedingly crappy one — StreetlightX
Streetlight
I doubt if Aristotle added the one-to-one qualification. If I had the text I wouldn't have to doubt. Can you easily reproduce it? — tim wood
Deleteduserrc
Problems - true problems - inspire and compel (not unlike a physical force); they take us beyond, into the new, the unexplored, the unfamiliar. And this is, at minimum, what philosophy does best. — StreetlightX
Deleteduserrc
Deleteduserrc
Streetlight
Deleteduserrc
Streetlight
It doesn't feel like you're talking about a connection you've made, or stuff you're working through. — csalisbury
Deleteduserrc
Good. That's the point - a well posed problem/issue shouldn't need some sort of journalistic fluff around it like [personal anecdote-serious stuff-cute story-feel good moral]. I don't care about that stuff and more importantly I don't want to have to waste time talking about that stuff. The issue should stand on it's own, be objected to/engaged with on its own terms, and the more I can make it seem like it does, the better. If it doesn't catch because I don't appeal to some human storytelling imperative then so be it, sucks for me, but man, I've put something into words that I think is coherent and helps me think things through and that's cool for me.
Like, I think you think I just bang this stuff out like it's second nature - except I don't (sorry to disappoint?). I mean, yeah, 'course you can be 'forgiven' for missing that, but people generally don't give AF enough to care - which I like.
Also, university discourse I can deal with. I'm on an internet forum, talking smack. Hardly under any illusions of Grand Revolutionary Transference of The Real.
Streetlight
Deleteduserrc
the most interesting problems always demand more from their solutions than what can be already found in the problem to begin with. What does this mean? — sx
Deleteduserrc
Eh, your problem, not mine.
What is the nature of a problem?
Cuthbert
fdrake
Streetlight
It's a nice way to understand what a proposition is, though. Sometimes it seems that propositions are taken to be platonic objects, if not explicitly then in just the approach to them. Yes, of course John said that P, but we're going to lift P out of that context and deal with it. — frank
Janus
Consider a more general equation, like "x+y=3", where 'x' and 'y' can take on multiple/different values. — StreetlightX
frank
Streetlight
Streetlight
Srap Tasmaner
This is possibly one of the reasons analytic philosophy is such a graveyard of ideas: ... Propositions - yuck. — StreetlightX
frank
Merleau-Ponty is more my jam, but I'm not entirely sure what you mean by 'propositions as phenomneology'- your cite doesn't really expand upon it. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
Streetlight
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